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South Asia Review of South Asia1 • Questions • South Asia – Population Geography • Physiological vs. arithmetic population density • Demographic transition model
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South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

South Asia

Review of South Asia1

• Questions

• South Asia– Population Geography

• Physiological vs. arithmetic population density

• Demographic transition model

Page 2: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Population Geography

• Spatial view of demography– Study of population distribution, composition,

rates of growth, and patterns of flow

• Population density– Arithmetic– Physiologic

• Key measures– Rate of natural increase– Doubling time

Page 3: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Arithmetic vs.Physiologic Population Densities

• Arithmetic density:– Population/unit land area)

• Physiologic density:– Population/unit area of arable land

• Arable land– Land suitable for plowing and crop production– Land which can be cultivated– (does not include grazing land)

Page 4: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Arithmetic vs.Physiological Population Densities

Country Arithmetic density (per mi2)

Physiological density (per mi2)

Canada 8 164

Netherlands 1,029 4,955

Egypt 192 9,638

India 855 1,688

Bangladesh 2,510 3,800

Page 5: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.
Page 6: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.
Page 7: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

POPULATION GROWTH

Page 8: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.
Page 9: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.
Page 10: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Doubling Time

• The 29th Day

• China: 60 years in 1985, now 82 years

• India: 31 years in 1985, now 42 years

• Family planning

Page 11: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

'Simple answer for a healthy family:

The second child should come after three years'

During the National Emergency (1975-77), the emphasis on family planning posters was not to have more than two children. This was certainly unpalatable for the masses.

This poster seems a lot more democratic in conveying the underlying message.

Page 12: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION MODEL

Page 13: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

West PakistanEast Pakistan(Bangladesh after 1971)

India

PAKISTAN (AT PARTITION)

Page 14: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

PAKISTAN

Page 15: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Pakistan• Islamic Republic of Pakistan• Population of 150 million• Official language:Urdu (Arabic+Farsi+Hindi)

– Urdu is written in Arabic script/Hindi is written in Devanagari• Capital: Karachi-Islamabad

– Forward capital• 80% Sunni Muslims; 16% Shia minority• Subregions:

– Punjab (2) – 60% of Palistani population – Punjabi– Sind – Hyderabad – 2 too!– Baluchistan– North west frontier

Page 16: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Kashmir• Independence & partition

– Jammu & Kashmir: Hindu India or Muslim Pakistan?

– Hindu Maharaja but Muslim majority

– Attempts to remain outside both India and Pakistan at Independence

• 1947 – Pakistani tribesmen invade

• January 1949 – U.N. Cease fire

• Kashmir was partitioned

• 1980-88 Muslims continue insurgency

• 1990-95: 10,000 killed

• 1998: Nuclear ‘tests’ by India and Pakistan

Page 17: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

INDIA

Page 18: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

INDIA

• Federation of 28 STATES, 6 Union Territories, & National Capital Territory

• Population: 1.27 billion – Is a billion 109 or 1012 ?

• 28% urbanized• 14 official languages

– numerous minor languages– Hindi is official language– English is lingua franca)

Page 19: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Why has India remained united?

• From a cultural/political standpoint:• Centripetal forces

– Forces that unite and bind together– Satisfaction with government– Sense of justice and shared opportunity

• Centrifugal forces– Forces that divide and encourage secession– Religious, racial, linguistic, political divisions

Page 20: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Centrifugal Forces

• 25 separate states

• 14 official languages

• 150 million Muslims– Largest minority in the world

• 20 million Sikhs

• Thousands of castes

Page 21: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Centripetal Forces

• Hinduism

• Government institutions

• Infrastructure

• Common opposition to British rule– Pacifism of Mahatma Ghandi

Page 22: South Asia Review of South Asia1 Questions South Asia –Population Geography Physiological vs. arithmetic population density Demographic transition model.

Economic Development

• GDP: US$450 per capita• 38% live below the poverty line• A mixture of traditional village farming and

modern agriculture• Handicrafts, old and new branches of industry• Multitude of support services and nuclear

power• Textiles & clothing• IT services