Critical Social Inquiry 0222 - Rethinking/Population Problem

Spring
2013
1
4.00
Elizabeth Hartmann;Kay Johnson

02:00PM-03:20PM T,TH

Hampshire College
310626
Franklin Patterson Hall 107
ehSS@hampshire.edu;kajSS@hampshire.edu
In the last century the world experienced a rapid increase in population growth, giving rise to fears of 'overpopulation.' Today, these fears persist even as birth rates decline around the globe. Population remains a controversial issue, the subject of theoretical and political debates which cut across traditional categories of Right and Left. How one understands the population problem has profound consequences for social policy. This course will examine population from many different angles. Topics include: basic demographic dynamics; the relationship of population growth to poverty, the environment and security; population and climate change; the history of the population establishment; the immigration debate; family planning and population control; contraceptive controversies; and new fears of a population 'implosion.' There will be an in-depth case study of China's population policies.

Power, Community and Social Justice Independent Work Multiple Cultural Perspectives Writing and Research

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.