Foetus


Baby Flesh - now available in capsule form!

Marcus Roberts | 08 May 2012
 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Demography is Destiny
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Chinese Author Ma Jian and the One-Child Policy
17 May 2013
Bugs for Breakfast anyone?
15 May 2013
Ageing Population = Lower Productivity Growth?
13 May 2013
Happy Mother’s Day!
8 May 2013
Volunteering in New Zealand
6 May 2013

 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 2013 | Apr 2013 | Mar 2013 | Feb 2013 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

EU shows how to do a dodgy survey
16 May 2013
The EU's largest-ever survey of hate crimes and discrimination against LGBT people claims that they labour under a terrible burden.…

How legal euthanasia changed Belgium for ever
17 May 2013
The ideology of absolute self-determination has become sacred and unquestionable.

The fallacy of a happy, productive and ageing work force
17 May 2013
Glib answers will not conjure away the hard, cold fact that workers everywhere are getting older and older.

What is parenthood?
15 May 2013
In debates about the family, some social scientists are asserting the primacy of theory over facts. Is this science?

Reason and responsibility: the Rana Plaza collapse
13 May 2013
The Rana Plaza tragedy was an outcome of a corrupt system that is rotten to the core. Who should --…


 Tags
predictions, Maternity Care, Retirement, birth rate, Border security, aid, Lancet, wealth, Chen Guangcheng, carbon emissions, family, working class, GDP, urban population, East Timor, Telegraph, sex selective abortions, Latvia, Steven Mosher, baby boomers, euthanasia, Guardian, Feminism, Olympics, gendercide, malthus, Indonesia, Viagra, increasing birth rates, human rights, Western Australia, superbugs, youth unemployment, Dementia, utilitarianism, birth rates, Belfast, Islam, Australia, Ministry of Social Development, Year of the Dragon, centenarians, births, Overpopulation, low fertility trap, population growth, Youth, wages, healthcare, Paul Ehrlich, Romania, Bangladesh, YouTube, Sweden, Rugby World Cup, International, Internet use, Uganda, Minority Groups, Britain, recession, American politics, austria, Baby Boomers, Singapore, UNFPA, Mortality, modernity, statistics, status of women, satire, 7 billion people, Norman Borlaug, Intelligence, pollution, UNICEF, emigration, Children, productivity, climate change, New York Times, propaganda, Apocalypse, Korea, The Onion, over-population, mothers, Japan tsunami, Auckland, jobs and economy, Africa, Detroit, One Child Policy, Nature magazine, Anglican Church, Somalia, Russia, Infant Mortality, pension plans, philanthropy,