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Population Aging, Human Capital Accumulation, and Productivity Growth
Prskawetz, Bloom, and Lutz, eds., 2008
Studies included cover the broad economic significance of the global aging of the work force. (more) (contents)
326 pp., $25.00

The Political Economy of Global Population Change, 1950–2050
Demeny and McNicoll, eds., 2006
Explores the international political dimensions of the population explosion and its aftermath. (more) (contents)
288 pp., $21.00

Aging, Health, and Public Policy: Demographic and Economic Perspectives
Waite, ed., 2004
Explores the economic, demographic, and epidemiological aspects of population aging trends and consequences. (more) (downloadable contents)
265 pp., $21.00

Life Span: Evolutionary, Ecological, and Demographic Perspectives
Carey and Tuljapurkar, eds., 2003
Explores the subject of the life span, both human and animal, by bringing together research conducted by scholars from many disciplines. (more) (downloadable contents)
Available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
293 pp., $18.00

Population and Environment: Methods of Analysis
Lutz, Prskawetz, and Sanderson, eds., 2002
This book represents the first systematic collection of population–environment methodologies and includes eight essays by demographers, social scientists, and environmental scientists.
Available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
251 pp., $18.00

Global Fertility Transition
Bulatao and Casterline, eds., 2001
Explores the factors underlying fertility transition, analyzes recent trends, and considers the implications for future projections.
Available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
340 pp., $18.00

Population and Economic Change in East Asia
Chu and Lee, eds., 2000
This volume, which analyzes the interplay between economic and demographic trends in East Asia, is novel in treating population aging as an integral part of the region's demographic transition.
Available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
320 pp., $15.00

Frontiers of Population Forecasting
Lutz, Vaupel, and Ahlburg, eds., 1998
Reexamination of the procedures of population forecasting in response to emerging demands. Addresses key issues: What population characteristics beyond the standard variables of age and sex should routinely enter population forecasts? When should forecasts take account of economic or environmental feedbacks? How is forecasting accuracy to be assessed and what is the past record? What is the state of the art of stochastic time series modeling of population change? How can users cope with probability distributions? What scope is there for application of methods to incorporate expert opinion into population forecasting?
Available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
199 pp., $15.00

Fertility in the United States: New Patterns, New Theories
Casterline, Lee, and Foote, eds., 1996
Assessment of substantial and unappreciated changes in US fertility behavior during the past two decades, with new frameworks and theories for interpreting these changes.  (more)
Available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
340 pp., $20.00

The New Politics of Population: Conflict and Consensus in Family Planning
Finkle and McIntosh, eds., 1994
An examination of the major issues and actors—political and religious leaders, feminists, and others—and the events that have shaped global trends in family planning policies and programs in recent decades.
Out of print; available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
276 pp.

Resources, Environment, and Population: Present Knowledge, Future Options
Davis and Bernstam, eds., 1990
Explores impending problems and interrelations between population trends, resource use, and environmental consequences.
Out of print; available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
421 pp.

Rural Development and Population
McNicoll and Cain, eds., 1990
Investigation of the ways in which the institutional configurations of societies influence the relationships between population dynamics and rural social and economic change.
Out of print; available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
366 pp.

Population and Resources in Western Intellectual Traditions
Teitelbaum and Winter, eds., 1988
An examination of the intersection of science and ideology in the development of Western thought on population, resources, and the environment since the industrial revolution.
Out of print; available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
310 pp.

Below-Replacement Fertility in Industrial Societies: Causes, Consequences, Policies
Davis, Bernstam, and Ricardo-Campbell, eds., 1986
Systematic discussions of the demographic effects of below-replacement fertility with efforts to explain its social origins, to determine the likely societal consequences, and to assess potential policy responses.
Out of print; available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
360 pp.

Child Survival: Strategies for Research
Mosley and Chen, eds., 1984
In all poor countries, malnutrition and infectious diseases are the major biological processes leading to child deaths; but the social, economic, and environmental determinants of the variations in these conditions in different societies are poorly understood. This supplement contains papers by specialists within two separate disciplines—demography and epidemiology—primarily concerned with investigating such topics.
Out of print; available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
416 pp.

Income Distribution and the Family
Ben-Porath, ed., 1982
Addresses the important question of how family composition and related demographic processes affect and are affected by the generation and distribution of income in developing countries, and examines the difficult technical and conceptual issues involved in analyzing these relationships.
Out of print; available online from JSTOR (offsite link)
248 pp.


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This page updated
2 April 2008