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Population and Development Review
(PDR) seeks to advance knowledge of the interrelationships between population and socioeconomic development and provides a forum for discussion of related issues of public policy.    

The journal contains:

  • Articles on advances in theory and application, policy analysis, sociographic studies, and critical assessments of recent research

  • Notes and commentaries on current population questions and policy developments

  • Data and perspectives on new statistics and their interpretation

  • Archives with a resonance for current debate on population issues

  • Book reviews

  • Documents and official voices on population matters from around the world.

Population and Development Review is published on behalf of the Population Council by Blackwell Publishing.

To subscribe to PDR or renew your current subscription, please go to Wiley-Blackwell/PDR.

The full contents of volumes 1–30 (1975–2004) are available through participating libraries from JSTOR.

Contact the Office of Publications.

 

 



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This page updated
2 December 2008


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PDR Supplements

Population Aging, Human Capital Accumulation, and Productivity Growth (2008) covers the broad economic significance of the global aging of the work force. (more) (contents)

The Political Economy of Global Population Change, 1950–2050 (2006) explores the international political dimensions of the population explosion and its aftermath. (more) (contents)

Aging, Health, and Public Policy: Demographic and Economic Perspectives (2004) explores the impact of population aging in the United States. The contents of this supplement are now available online as PDFs. (more) (downloadable contents)

Additional information on PDR supplements

 

Latest Issue
(December 2008)

Articles

"Aristotle and open population thinking" (abstract)

"'Population invasion' versus urban exclusion in the Tibetan areas of western China" (abstract)

"Food price surges: Possible causes, past experience, and longer term relevance" (abstract)

"Consequences of family policies on childbearing behavior: Effects or artifacts?" (abstract)

Notes and Commentary

"'Demodystopias': Prospects of demographic hell" (abstract)

Data and Perspectives

"Continued reductions in mortality at advanced ages" (abstract)

To view the full table of contents of the latest issue, order a subscription, or  purchase individual articles, please go to Wiley-Blackwell/PDR.