Taking Population Seriously

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 $7.95 



Most books on population simply sound the alarm. Taking Population Seriously asks what positively can be learned form the Third World's few success stories. Six Third World countries, plus the Indian state of Kerala, stand out for achieving dramatic reductions in birth rates. What made their success possible? What lessons do they hold for our planet?




Taking Population Seriously

Frances Moore Lappé and Rachel Schurman

ISBN: 0-935028-53-6

1990

96 pages


$7.95 paperback

"Taking Population Seriously is a thoughtful, well-researched,
and persuasive. Lappé and Schurman's work has instructed and inspired
me."

--Dr. Donella Meadows, Environmental Studies Program, Dartmouth College

"Taking Population Seriously is the perfect remedy for those who
naively believe that the root cause of hunger, poverty, and children's mortality
throughout the world is simply population growth."

--Dr. George Kent, Political Science Department, University of Hawaii


Table of Contents

Chapter One: The Population Puzzle

Chapter Two: The Population Debate

    What Set Off the Population Explosion?

    Population: What's the Problem?

Chapter Three: A Power-Structures Perspective

    Children: Poor People's Source of Power

    When Many Babies Die

    Women: Powerlessness and High Birth Rates

    The Fertility Consequences of Son Preference

    Not Only Women Are Made Powerless

    Summarizing the Power-Structures Perspective

Chapter Four: The Debate About Solutions

    The Consequences of Focusing Narrowly on Family Planning

    How Far Can Birth Control Alone Take Us?

    Can Reducing Population Growth Alleviate Hunger and Other Social Problems?

    Solutions from the Power-Structures Perspective

Chapter Five: Reflections And Implications

    For Action

    Adding the Missing Piece to the Population Puzzle

    A Country's Poverty Is No Excuse

    Broadening the Vision

    Effective Responses to the Population Problem

Notes