Demography (from prefix demo- from Ancient Greek δῆμος dēmos meaning "the people", and -graphy from γράφω graphō, ies "writing, description or measurement") is the statistical study of populations, especially human beings.
Demography encompasses the study of the size, structure, and distribution of these populations, and spatial or temporal changes in them in response to birth, migration, aging, and death. As a very general science, it can analyze any kind of dynamic living population, i.e., one that changes over time or space. Demographics are quantifiable characteristics of a given population.
Demographic analysis can cover whole societies or groups defined by criteria such as education, nationality, religion, and ethnicity. Educational institutions usually treat demography as a field of sociology, though there are a number of independent demography departments. Based on the demographic research of the earth, earth's population up to the year 2050 and 2100 can be estimated by demographers.
Formal demography limits its object of study to the measurement of population processes, while the broader field of social demography or population studies also analyses the relationships between economic, social, cultural, and biological processes influencing a population.
History
Demographic thoughts traced back to antiquity, and were present in many civilisations and cultures, like Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, China and India. Demography is made up of two word Demos and Graphy . The term Demography refers to the overall study of population.
In ancient Greece, this can be found in the writings of Herodotus, Thucidides, Hippocrates, Epicurus, Protagoras, Polus, Plato and Aristotle. In Rome, writers and philosophers like Cicero, Seneca, Pliny the elder, Marcus Aurelius, Epictetus, Cato, and Columella also expressed important ideas on this ground.
In the Middle ages, Christian thinkers devoted much time in refuting the Classical ideas on demography. Important contributors to the field were William of Conches, Bartholomew of Lucca, William of Auvergne, William of Pagula, and Muslim sociologists like Ibn Khaldun.
One of the earliest demographic studies in the modern period was Natural and Political Observations Made upon the Bills of Mortality (1662) by John Graunt, which contains a primitive form of life table.
Among the study's findings were that one third of the children in
London died before their sixteenth birthday. Mathematicians, such as Edmond Halley, developed the life table as the basis for life insurance mathematics. Richard Price was credited with the first textbook on life contingencies published in 1771, followed later by Augustus de Morgan, ‘On the Application of Probabilities to Life Contingencies’ (1838).
In 1755, Benjamin Franklin published his essay Observations Concerning the Increase of Mankind, Peopling of Countries, etc., projecting exponential growth in British colonies. His work influenced Thomas Robert Malthus,
who, writing at the end of the 18th century, feared that, if unchecked,
population growth would tend to outstrip growth in food production,
leading to ever-increasing famine and poverty. Malthus is seen as the intellectual father of ideas of overpopulation and the limits to growth. Later, more sophisticated and realistic models were presented by Benjamin Gompertz and Verhulst.
In 1855, a Belgian scholar Achille Guillard defined demography as
the natural and social history of human species or the mathematical
knowledge of populations, of their general changes, and of their
physical, civil, intellectual and moral condition.
The period 1860-1910 can be characterised as a period of
transition wherein demography emerged from statistics as a separate
field of interest. This period included a panoply of international
‘great demographers’ like Adolphe Quételet (1796–1874), William Farr (1807–1883), Louis-Adolphe Bertillon (1821–1883) and his son Jacques (1851–1922), Joseph Körösi (1844–1906), Anders Nicolas Kaier (1838–1919), Richard Böckh (1824–1907), Émile Durkheim (1858-1917), Wilhelm Lexis (1837–1914), and Luigi Bodio (1840–1920) contributed to the development of demography and to the toolkit of methods and techniques of demographic analysis.
Methods
There are two types of data collection—direct and indirect—with several different methods of each type.
Direct methods
Direct
data comes from vital statistics registries that track all births and
deaths as well as certain changes in legal status such as marriage,
divorce, and migration (registration of place of residence). In
developed countries with good registration systems (such as the United
States and much of Europe), registry statistics are the best method for
estimating the number of births and deaths.
A census
is the other common direct method of collecting demographic data. A
census is usually conducted by a national government and attempts to
enumerate every person in a country. In contrast to vital statistics
data, which are typically collected continuously and summarized on an
annual basis, censuses typically occur only every 10 years or so, and
thus are not usually the best source of data on births and deaths.
Analyses are conducted after a census to estimate how much over or
undercounting took place. These compare the sex ratios from the census data to those estimated from natural values and mortality data.
Censuses do more than just count people. They typically collect
information about families or households in addition to individual
characteristics such as age, sex, marital status, literacy/education,
employment status, and occupation, and geographical location. They may
also collect data on migration (or place of birth or of previous
residence), language, religion, nationality (or ethnicity or race), and
citizenship. In countries in which the vital registration system may be
incomplete, the censuses are also used as a direct source of
information about fertility and mortality; for example the censuses of
the People's Republic of China gather information on births and deaths that occurred in the 18 months immediately preceding the census.
Indirect methods
Indirect
methods of collecting data are required in countries and periods where
full data are not available, such as is the case in much of the
developing world, and most of historical demography.
One of these techniques in contemporary demography is the sister
method, where survey researchers ask women how many of their sisters
have died or had children and at what age. With these surveys,
researchers can then indirectly estimate birth or death rates for the
entire population. Other indirect methods in contemporary demography
include asking people about siblings, parents, and children. Other
indirect methods are necessary in historical demography.
There are a variety of demographic methods for modelling population processes. They include models of mortality (including the life table, Gompertz models, hazards models, Cox proportional hazards models, multiple decrement life tables, Brass relational logits), fertility (Hernes model, Coale-Trussell models, parity progression ratios), marriage (Singulate Mean at Marriage, Page model), disability (Sullivan's method, multistate life tables), population projections (Lee-Carter model, the Leslie Matrix), and population momentum (Keyfitz).
The United Kingdom has a series of four national birth cohort
studies, the first three spaced apart by 12 years: the 1946 National
Survey of Health and Development, the 1958 National Child Development Study, the 1970 British Cohort Study, and the Millennium Cohort Study,
begun much more recently in 2000. These have followed the lives of
samples of people (typically beginning with around 17,000 in each study)
for many years, and are still continuing. As the samples have been
drawn in a nationally representative way, inferences can be drawn from
these studies about the differences between four distinct generations of
British people in terms of their health, education, attitudes,
childbearing and employment patterns.
Common rates and ratios
- The crude birth rate, the annual number of live births per 1,000 people.
- The general fertility rate, the annual number of live births per 1,000 women of childbearing age (often taken to be from 15 to 49 years old, but sometimes from 15 to 44).
- The age-specific fertility rates, the annual number of live births per 1,000 women in particular age groups (usually age 15–19, 20-24 etc.)
- The crude death rate, the annual number of deaths per 1,000 people.
- The infant mortality rate, the annual number of deaths of children less than 1 year old per 1,000 live births.
- The expectation of life (or life expectancy), the number of years that an individual at a given age could expect to live at present mortality levels.
- The total fertility rate, the number of live births per woman completing her reproductive life, if her childbearing at each age reflected current age-specific fertility rates.
- The replacement level fertility, the average number of children women must have in order to replace the population for the next generation. For example, the replacement level fertility in the US is 2.11.
- The gross reproduction rate, the number of daughters who would be born to a woman completing her reproductive life at current age-specific fertility rates.
- The net reproduction ratio is the expected number of daughters, per newborn prospective mother, who may or may not survive to and through the ages of childbearing.
- A stable population, one that has had constant crude birth and death rates for such a long period of time that the percentage of people in every age class remains constant, or equivalently, the population pyramid has an unchanging structure.
- A stationary population, one that is both stable and unchanging in size (the difference between crude birth rate and crude death rate is zero).
A stable population does not necessarily remain fixed in size. It can be expanding or shrinking.
Note that the crude death rate as defined above and applied to a
whole population can give a misleading impression. For example, the
number of deaths per 1,000 people can be higher for developed nations
than in less-developed countries, despite standards of health being
better in developed countries. This is because developed countries have
proportionally more older people, who are more likely to die in a given
year, so that the overall mortality rate can be higher even if the
mortality rate at any given age is lower. A more complete picture of
mortality is given by a life table, which summarizes mortality separately at each age. A life table is necessary to give a good estimate of life expectancy.
Basic equation
Suppose that a country (or other entity) contains Populationt persons at time t.
What is the size of the population at time t + 1 ?
Natural increase from time t to t + 1:
Net migration from time t to t + 1:
This basic equation can also be applied to subpopulations. For
example, the population size of ethnic groups or nationalities within a
given society or country is subject to the same sources of change. When
dealing with ethnic groups, however, "net migration" might have to be
subdivided into physical migration and ethnic reidentification (assimilation).
Individuals who change their ethnic self-labels or whose ethnic
classification in government statistics changes over time may be thought
of as migrating or moving from one population subcategory to another.
More generally, while the basic demographic equation holds true
by definition, in practice the recording and counting of events (births,
deaths, immigration, emigration) and the enumeration of the total
population size are subject to error. So allowance needs to be made for
error in the underlying statistics when any accounting of population
size or change is made.
The figure in this section shows the latest (2004) UN projections
of world population out to the year 2150 (red = high, orange = medium,
green = low). The UN "medium" projection shows world population reaching
an approximate equilibrium at 9 billion by 2075. Working independently,
demographers at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria expect world population to peak at 9 billion by 2070. Throughout the 21st century, the average age of the population is likely to continue to rise.
Science of population
Populations
can change through three processes: fertility, mortality, and
migration. Fertility involves the number of children that women have
and is to be contrasted with fecundity (a woman's childbearing
potential).
Mortality is the study of the causes, consequences, and measurement of
processes affecting death to members of the population. Demographers
most commonly study mortality using the Life Table,
a statistical device that provides information about the mortality
conditions (most notably the life expectancy) in the population.
Migration refers to the movement of persons from a locality of
origin to a destination place across some predefined, political
boundary. Migration researchers do not designate movements 'migrations'
unless they are somewhat permanent. Thus demographers do not consider
tourists and travellers to be migrating. While demographers who study
migration typically do so through census data on place of residence,
indirect sources of data including tax forms and labour force surveys
are also important.
Demography is today w(?) Great Depression many universities across
the world, attracting students with initial training in social sciences,
statistics or health studies. Being at the crossroads of several
disciplines such as sociology, economics, epidemiology, geography, anthropology and history,
demography offers tools to approach a large range of population issues
by combining a more technical quantitative approach that represents the
core of the discipline with many other methods borrowed from social or
other sciences. Demographic research is conducted in universities, in
research institutes as well as in statistical departments and in several
international agencies. Population institutions are part of the Cicred
(International Committee for Coordination of Demographic Research)
network while most individual scientists engaged in demographic research
are members of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, or a national association such as the Population Association of America in the United States, or affiliates of the Federation of Canadian Demographers in Canada.