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369 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 1 (1967)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0369 and id is 1 raw text is: A Long-Range View of World Population Growth
By JOHN D. DURAND
ABSTRACT: Mankind is undergoing an extraordinary ex-
pansion of numbers, unparalleled in history, which began in
the eighteenth century and which has gathered increasing
momentum since the beginning of the present century. The
increase of the earth's human population during the last two
hundred years has been three times greater than the cumulated
growth during all the previous millennia of man's existence on
the planet, and it appears likely that a still greater increase
may be in store for the future, before a position of numerical
stability is reached. The speeding up of population growth
has been brought about by a great improvement in the condi-
tions of mortality, which has enhanced the biological power
of multiplication of the species. This has been partly offset
in the economically more developed countries by restraint of
reproduction, but reproduction rates remain undiminished
in most of the less developed countries. The latter countries
contain the major share of world population and are receiving
an even larger share of the current increase resulting from the
excess of births over deaths throughout the world. The crux
of the world population problem is in the association of per-
sistent poverty and technological retardation with unremitting
rapid growth of numbers in the less developed countries.
John D. Durand, Ph.D., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is Professor of Economics and
Sociology and Chairman of the Graduate Group in Demography at the University of
Pennsylvania. Formerly of the Population Division, United States Bureau of the Census,
he joined the United States Secretariat in 1948 and remained there until 1965 as a staff
member of the Population Branch, taking charge of the Branch from 1954 onward as
Assistant Director of the Bureau of Social Affairs. He is the author of The Labor Force
in the United States, 1890-1960 (1948) and various articles on population questions.

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