Reference no: EM13453657
Demographic transition is the process in which a nation transitions from being a less industrialized society, with high birth and death rates, to an industrialized nation, with lower birth and death rates. Many countries have already been through this transition including the United States, England, and Canada.
The demographic transition to an industrialized society is detrimental for the environment because industrialized societies tend to use up nonrenewable resources and give off pollution. Industrialized nations have the largest ecological and carbon footprint relative to developing or nonindustrialized countries. Fortunately, there are some benefits to the process of demographic transition, including lower birth and death rates. Essentially, people in industrialized countries have fewer children and this in turn helps control the overall population size.
Demographic transition involves the following five stages:
Stage 1 |
High birth rate, high death rate, low population size |
Stage 2 |
High birth rate, decreasing death rate, increasing population size
|
Stage 3 |
Decreasing birth rate, decreasing death rate, increasing population size |
Stage 4 |
Low birth rate, low death rate, high population size |
Stage 5 |
Low birth rate, low death rate, population size decreasing |
It should be noted that stage 5 is controversial, and it is sometimes not considered to be a stage. This is partially because so few countries are at this stage.
The following graph depicts the various stages of demographic transition:
Using the stages listed above, create a demographic and environmental timeline for one industrialized country, excluding the United States. The following are a few suggested industrialized nations:
- Canada
- England
- Germany
- Russia
- Italy