The History of Human Populations : Volume II, Migration, Urbanization, and Structural Change

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The History of Human Populations : Volume II, Migration, Urbanization, and Structural Change

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 584 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780275971915
  • DDC分類 304.609

Full Description

Building upon models set forth in Volume I of this work, Harris turns his attention to populations on the move. Through examples from literature on migration, the Atlantic slave trade and slave demography, and urbanization, this study demonstrates how all types of migration—free and forced, long-distance and local—build up and are then absorbed into populations according to the same patterns that characterize populations in general. What causes these few closely related trends to reappear, Harris argues, is the way structures of populations alter, according to a standard absorption of these migrations, and react to other events via changes in births, deaths, and composition by age and sex.

Harris finds that something fundamental in the process of demographic renewal consistently imprints a few common shapes upon many kinds of demographic, as well as social and economic, developments. Fresh perspectives on the business of the slave trade and the much-discussed modern shifts from agriculture into other employments, and from countryside to town or city, illustrate how ubiquitously and how fundamentally demographically generated trends shape social and economic movements. A future volume will identify and explain the origins of such ever-present patterns of change in the dynamics of fertility, mortality, and demographic renewal.

Contents

Illustrations
Preface
Introduction
The Nature of Trends in Migration
The International Slave Trade, 1450-1850: Further Perspective on Familiar Movements
Going to Town: Urbanization and the Demographic Development of Cities
The Growth and Change of Extended Urban Systems
Stabilizing the Exceptional?: Demographic Dimensions of Slavery and Slaving
How Other Populations Have Normalized or Adjusted
Summary and Implications
Bibliography
Index