This revised and updated version incorporates completely new scenario projections based on updated starting values and revised assumptions, plus several methodological improvements. It also contains the best currently available information on global trends in AIDS mortality and the first ever fully probabilistic world population projections. The projections, given up to 2100, add important additional features to those of the UN and the World Bank: they show the impacts of alternative assumptions for all three components (mortality and migration, as well as fertility); they explicitly take into account possible environmental limits to growth; and, for the first time, they define confidence levels for global populations. Combining methodolo...
The world population is now passing the 4 billion mark, and at the present rate of increase it would...
This paper traces the major changes in the global population over the past half-century and examines...
The United Nations Population Division has just pu-blished the final version of a bold exercise in p...
The size and rate of growth of the world's population over the next 50 to 100 years is critically i...
This paper presents, to our knowledge, the first probabilistic projections of the world population. ...
The total size of the world population is likely to increase from its current 7 billion to 8 -10 bil...
There has been enormous concern about the consequences of human population growth for the environmen...
For six major regions of the world, ten alternative scenarios on future fertility and mortality tren...
Most national and international agencies producing population projections explicitly avoid addressin...
The total size of the world population is likely to increase from its current 7 billion to 8-10 bill...
Past, current and projected future population growth is outlined. Barring a calamitous pandemic, a f...
To open this “Focus”, Gilles Pison offers us an overall vision based on past developments to help us...
This working paper analyzes the most recent population assessments and projections (the 1996 edition...
Most national and international agencies producing population projections avoid addressing explicitl...
AbstractThis paper applies the methods of multi-dimensional mathematical demography to project natio...
The world population is now passing the 4 billion mark, and at the present rate of increase it would...
This paper traces the major changes in the global population over the past half-century and examines...
The United Nations Population Division has just pu-blished the final version of a bold exercise in p...
The size and rate of growth of the world's population over the next 50 to 100 years is critically i...
This paper presents, to our knowledge, the first probabilistic projections of the world population. ...
The total size of the world population is likely to increase from its current 7 billion to 8 -10 bil...
There has been enormous concern about the consequences of human population growth for the environmen...
For six major regions of the world, ten alternative scenarios on future fertility and mortality tren...
Most national and international agencies producing population projections explicitly avoid addressin...
The total size of the world population is likely to increase from its current 7 billion to 8-10 bill...
Past, current and projected future population growth is outlined. Barring a calamitous pandemic, a f...
To open this “Focus”, Gilles Pison offers us an overall vision based on past developments to help us...
This working paper analyzes the most recent population assessments and projections (the 1996 edition...
Most national and international agencies producing population projections avoid addressing explicitl...
AbstractThis paper applies the methods of multi-dimensional mathematical demography to project natio...
The world population is now passing the 4 billion mark, and at the present rate of increase it would...
This paper traces the major changes in the global population over the past half-century and examines...
The United Nations Population Division has just pu-blished the final version of a bold exercise in p...