Aging Population


Beckham birth ‘bad example’ or ‘good news’?

Shannon Buckley | 15 August 2011
 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Demography is Destiny
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
The Rhema Project
25 May 2012
A more religious future?
24 May 2012
Mexicans are no longer throwing themselves at the fence
18 May 2012
A New American Dream?
18 May 2012
Bollywood and gendercide in India
16 May 2012

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
Family social policy: Family Edge
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
May 2012 | Apr 2012 | Mar 2012 | Feb 2012 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

Sensing the sacred
25 May 2012
Is there a sense of the sacred that even the non-religious can share?

Could geoengineering save the planet?
25 May 2012
And who is thinking about the ethics of a technological quick fix?

A thought experiment about marriage
24 May 2012
A world in which sexual intimacy could not produce children would never have come up with the idea of marriage.

Australia’s lifeline: its precarious sea lanes
23 May 2012
Large, isolated and rich, Australia needs to cultivate a friendship with the US to survive in an dangerous world.

It’s only natural
22 May 2012
The bitterest debates today in the public square often turn on what is "natural". The Chinese sages had a lot…


 Tags
centenarian, Uzbekistan, subsidy, Birth Control, Immigration, Beneficiaries, euthanasia, female feticide, Steven Mosher, Russia, shortages, Guardian, demographic winter, Gompertz law, Rugby World Cup, workforce shortage, Oxfam, ageing, March for Life, population projections, pro-natalism, Wall Street Journal, Latvia, minorities, Colombia, pension, Religious Practice, US, Ministry of Social Development, abortions, secularism, Demographic conference, birth rates, Optimum Population Trust, Migration, life expectancy, UN, YouTube, Adoption, debt, Brendan O'Neill, PETA, Baby Bonus, The Economist, propaganda, Korea, New Forests Company, labour market, Bollywood, overpopulation myth, Christmas, West Virginia, over-population, Technology, Medicine, Norman Borlaug, Poverty, Year of the Dragon, sex ratio, South Africa, Pakistan, youth bulge, Apocalypse, Europe, healthcare, UK, Chen Guangcheng, Law, South Korea, climate change, Putin, Children, Royal Family, Twins, aging, birthrates, Britain, human rights, religion, gendercide, one-child policy, census, Death Rate, United Nations, UNICEF, adoption, Canna, Obesity, Sterialisation, low fertility trap, Population Association of America, Hong Kong, China, Anglican Church, Malthus, population bomb, Auckland, Hispanic, Zimbabwe, sex,