Michael Cook
 Michael Cook likes bad puns, bushwalking and black coffee. He did a BA at Harvard University in the US where it was good for networking, but moved to Sydney where it wasn’t. He also did a PhD on an obscure corner of Australian literature. He has worked as a book editor and magazine editor and has published articles in magazines and newspapers in the US, the UK and Australia. Currently he is the editor of BioEdge, a newsletter about bioethics, and MercatorNet. |
As Army shrinks, South Korea to recruit women soldiers
Michael Cook | 4 Dec 2009
From 2011 South Korea may start recruiting women volunteers for its Army to make up for its growing shortage of young men.
Japan's new government seeks to boost birth rate
Michael Cook | 3 Dec 2009
Japan's new government, led by the Democratic Party of Japan, seems to
be taking its population problem seriously. The world's number two
economy is set to shrink from about 127 million to 95 million by 2050.
This means that the number of workers available to support retirees
will fall from 3 to 1.5. Because Japanese are notoriously hostile
towards increased immigration, the government's options are limited. It
is racking its brains for schemes to increase the birth rate. Here are
some mentioned in an article by AFP:
South Korea reluctantly becoming more diverse
Michael Cook | 3 Dec 2009
With the world's second-lowest birth rate and a gender imbalance to
boot because of sex-selective abortions, South Korean men are going
overseas to find brides. The growing number of mixed marriages is
creating worrying social problems for the goverrnment. According to the
New York Times, hundreds of thousands of women have migrated in recent
years, mostly to marry men in rural areas. Most of them come from
China, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines.
How many people have ever lived?
Michael Cook | 25 Nov 2009
How many people have ever lived upon earth? There is an urban legend
from the 1970s that 75% of the world’s total population from the Year 0
to now is alive today. This, it turns out, is nonsense. Demographer
Carl Haub, of the Population Reference Bureau, demolished this factoid
a few years ago. His argument is one of the best-read articles on the
PRB site, which republished it recently.
Africa passes billion mark
Michael Cook | 23 Nov 2009
A few interesting figures from the United Nations Population Fund report stand out.
No people, no climate change, says UN Population Fund
Michael Cook | 23 Nov 2009
From year to year, population grows at a glacial pace, so it’s tough job to bang the drum about over-population in a glossy annual report year after year. From a public relations point of view, the solution is to pick a trendy angle. The theme of the 2009 State of the World Population Report is women and climate change.
Is climate change killing children?
Michael Cook | 18 Nov 2009
What is the biggest killer of children in the developing world?
Japan slowly cruising into financial shipwreck
Michael Cook | 16 Nov 2009
Is Japan headed for financial meltdown because of decades of below
replacement-level birth rates? Ambrose Evans-Pritchard says that doom
is nigh in a recent column in the London Sunday Telegraph. He quotes a number of economists
A breathless moment in the history of reproductive rights
Michael Cook | 12 Nov 2009
The population control lobby is far from dead. There still are highly
influential academics who fervently believe that increasing aid for
population control (aka reproductive rights, women’s health, safe and
legal abortion) is absolutely necessary. Without it, the world will
turn into an over-heated, war-torn slum heaped with festering mountains
of garbage. This is the message that comes through loud and clear in a
special issue of an influential British journal...
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