Human overpopulation

Human overpopulation (or human population overshoot) describes a concern that human populations may become too large to be sustained by their environment or resources in the long term. The topic is usually discussed in the context of world population, though it may concern individual nations, regions, and cities.

Since 1804, the global human population has increased from 1 billion to 8 billion due to medical advancements and improved agricultural productivity. Annual world population growth peaked at 2.1% in 1968, and has since dropped to 1.1%.[1] According to the most recent United Nations' projections, "[t]he global population is expected to reach 9.7 billion in 2050 and 10.4 billion in 2100."[2]:28 The UN's projections report predicts that the human population will peak at around 10.4 billion people, before decreasing, noting that fertility rates are falling worldwide.[2]:14–30 Other models agree that the population will stabilize before or after 2100.[3][4][5]

Early discussions of overpopulation in English were spurred by the work of Thomas Malthus. Discussions of overpopulation follow a similar line of inquiry as Malthusianism and its Malthusian catastrophe,[6][7] a hypothetical event where population exceeds agricultural capacity, causing famine or war over resources, resulting in poverty and depopulation. More recent discussion of overpopulation was popularized by Paul Ehrlich in his 1968 book The Population Bomb and subsequent writings.[8][9] Ehrlich described overpopulation as a function of overconsumption,[10] arguing that overpopulation should be defined by a population being unable to sustain itself without depleting non-renewable resources.[11][12][13]

The belief that global population levels will become too large to sustain is a point of contentious debate. Those who believe global human overpopulation to be a valid concern, argue that increased levels of resource consumption and pollution exceed the environment's carrying capacity, leading to population overshoot.[14] The population overshoot hypothesis is often discussed in relation to other population concerns such as population momentum, biodiversity loss,[15] hunger and malnutrition,[16] resource depletion, and the overall human impact on the environment.[17]

Critics of the belief note that human population growth is decreasing and the population will likely peak, and possibly even begin to decrease, before the end of the century.[2]:27 They argue the concerns surrounding population growth are overstated, noting that quickly declining birth rates and technological innovation make it possible to sustain projected population sizes. Other critics claim that the concept is too narrowly focused, ignores more pressing issues, like poverty, and places an undue burden on the global south.[18][19]

Overview

Modern proponents of the concept have suggested that overpopulation, population growth and overconsumption are interdependent[20][21][22] and collectively are the primary drivers of human-caused environmental problems such as climate change[23][24] and biodiversity loss.[25][26][27] Many scientists have expressed concern about population growth, and argue that creating sustainable societies will require decreasing the current global population.[28][29][14][30] Advocates have suggested implementation of population planning strategies to reach a proposed sustainable population.

Overpopulation hypotheses are controversial, with many demographers and environmentalists disputing the core premise that the world cannot sustain the current trajectory of human population.[list 1] Additionally, many economists and historians have noted that sustained shortages and famines have historically been caused by war, price controls, political instability, and repressive political regimes (often employing central planning) rather than overpopulation,[list 2] and that population growth historically has led to greater technological development and advancement of scientific knowledge that has enabled the engineering of substitute goods and technology that better conserves and more efficiently uses natural resources, produces greater agricultural output with less land and less water, and addresses human impacts on the environment due to there being greater numbers of scientists, engineers, and inventors and subsequent generations of scientists overturning scientific paradigms maintained by previous generations of scientists.[list 3] Instead, social scientists argue that disputes between themselves and biologists about human overpopulation are over the appropriateness of definitions being used (and often devolve into social scientists and biologists simply talking past each other).[list 4]

Annual world population growth peaked at 2.1% in 1968, has since dropped to 1.1%, and could drop even further to 0.1% by 2100.[1] Based on this, the United Nations projects the world population, which is 7.8 billion as of 2020, to level out around 2100 at 10.9 billion[55][56][57] with other models proposing similar stabilization before or after 2100.[3][4][5] Some experts believe that a combination of factors (including technological and social change) would allow global resources to meet this increased demand, avoiding global overpopulation.[58][59] Additionally, some critics dismiss the idea of human overpopulation as a science myth connected to attempts to blame environmental issues on overpopulation, oversimplify complex social or economic systems, or place blame on developing countries and poor populations—reinscribing colonial or racist assumptions and leading to discriminatory policy.[54][7][60][31] These critics often suggest overconsumption should be treated as an issue separate from population growth.[61][62]

History of world population

UN population estimates and projection 1950–2100
Map of countries and territories by fertility rate (See List of countries and territories by fertility rate.)
Human population growth rate in percent, with the variables of births, deaths, immigration, and emigration – 2018

World population has been rising continuously since the end of the Black Death, around the year 1350.[63] The fastest doubling of the world population happened between 1950 and 1986: a doubling from 2.5 to 5 billion people in 37 years,[64] mainly due to medical advancements and increases in agricultural productivity.[65][66] Due to its impact on the human ability to grow food, the Haber process enabled the global population to increase from 1.6 billion in 1900 to 7.7 billion by November 2018 and, according to the United Nations, eight billion as of November 2022.[67][68][69] Some researchers have analyzed this growth in population like other animal populations, human populations predictably grow and shrink according to their available food supply as per the Lotka–Volterra equations, including agronomist and insect ecologist David Pimentel,[70] behavioral scientist Russell Hopfenberg,[71][72] and anthropologist Virginia Abernethy.[73]

World population history[74][75][76]
Year 180618501900194019501960197019801990200020102020
Billions 1.011.281.652.332.533.033.684.435.286.116.927.76

World population has gone through a number of periods of growth since the dawn of civilization in the Holocene period, around 10,000 BCE. The beginning of civilization roughly coincides with the receding of glacial ice following the end of the Last Glacial Period.[77] Farming allowed for the growth of populations in many parts of the world, including Europe, the Americas and China through the 1600s, occasionally disrupted by plagues or other crises.[78][79] For example, the Black Death is thought to have reduced the world's population, then at an estimated 450 million in 1350, to between 350 and 375 million by 1400.[80]

After the start of the Industrial Revolution, during the 18th century, the rate of population growth began to increase. By the end of the century, the world's population was estimated at just under 1 billion.[81] At the turn of the 20th century, the world's population was roughly 1.6 billion.[81] By 1940, this figure had increased to 2.3 billion.[82] Even more dramatic growth beginning in 1950 (above 1.8% per year) coincided with greatly increased food production as a result of the industrialization of agriculture brought about by the Green Revolution.[83] The rate of human population growth peaked in 1964, at about 2.1% per year.[84] Recent additions of a billion humans happened very quickly: 33 years to reach three billion in 1960, 14 years for four billion in 1974, 13 years for five billion in 1987, 12 years for six billion in 1999, 11 years for seven billion in 2010, and 12 years for 8 billion toward the end of 2022.[85][86]

Map of population density by country, per square kilometer (See List of countries by population density.)

Future projections

ContinentProjected 2050 population

by UN in 2017[87]

Africa2.5 billion
Asia5.5 billion
Europe716 million
Latin America and Caribbean780 million
North America435 million

Population projections are attempts to show how the human population might change in the future.[88] These projections help to forecast the population's impact on this planet and humanity's future well-being.[89] Models of population growth take trends in human development, and apply projections into the future[90] to understand how they will affect fertility and mortality, and thus population growth.[90]

The most recent report from the United Nations Population Division issued in 2022 (see chart) projects that global population will peak around the year 2086 at about 10.4 billion, and then start a slow decline (the median line on the chart).  As with earlier projections, this version assumes that the global average fertility rate will continue to fall, but even further from 2.5 births per woman during the 2015–2020 period to 1.8 by the year 2100.[91]

World population prospects (2022). Note that half a child more or less per woman would cause a difference of about 8 billion people by the end of the century (blue dotted lines).

However, other estimates predict additional downward pressure on fertility (such as more education and family planning) which could result in peak population during the 2060–2070 period rather than later.[3][4]

According to the UN, of the predicted growth in world population between 2020 and 2050, all of that change will come from less developed countries, and more than half will come from just 8 African countries.[91] It is predicted that the population of sub-Saharan Africa will double by 2050.[92] The Pew Research Center predicts that 50% of births in the year 2100 will be in Africa.[93] As an example of uneven prospects, the UN projects that Nigeria will gain about 340 million people, about the present population of the US, to become the 3rd most populous country, and China will lose almost half of its population.[91]

History of overpopulation hypotheses

Historical use

Concerns about population size or density have a long history: Tertullian, a resident of the city of Carthage in the second century CE, criticized population at the time: "Our numbers are burdensome to the world, which can hardly support us... In very deed, pestilence, and famine, and wars, and earthquakes have to be regarded as a remedy for nations, as the means of pruning the luxuriance of the human race."[94] Despite those concerns, scholars have not found historic societies that have collapsed because of overpopulation or overconsumption.[95]

Table of population growth in England 1780–1810 in An Essay on the Principle of Population (1826) by Thomas Malthus, which would go on to be an influential text on Malthusianism

By the early 19th century, intellectuals such as Thomas Malthus predicted that humankind would outgrow its available resources because a finite amount of land would be incapable of supporting a population with limitless potential for increase.[96] During the 19th century, Malthus' work, particularly An Essay on the Principle of Population, was often interpreted in a way that blamed the poor alone for their condition and helping them was said to worsen conditions in the long run.[97] This resulted, for example, in the English poor laws of 1834[97] and a hesitating response to the Irish Great Famine of 1845–52.[98]

The first World Population Conference was held in 1927 in Geneva, organized by the League of Nations and Margaret Sanger.[99][100][101]

Contemporary use

Paul R. Ehrlich's book The Population Bomb became a bestseller upon its release in 1968 and created renewed interest in overpopulation. The book predicted population growth would lead to famine, societal collapse, and other social, environmental and economic strife in the coming decades, and advocated for policies to curb it.[11][31][102] The Club of Rome published the influential report The Limits to Growth in 1972, which used computer modeling to similarly argue that continued population growth trends would lead to global system collapse.[103] The idea of overpopulation was also a topic of some works of English-language science fiction and dystopian fiction during the latter part of the 1960s.[102] The United Nations held the first of three World Population Conferences in 1974.[104] Human population and family planning policies were adopted by some nations in the late 20th century in an effort to curb population growth, including in China and India.[3] Albert Allen Bartlett gave more than 1,742 lectures on the threat of exponential population growth starting in 1969.[54]

American biologist Paul R. Ehrlich generated renewed interest in the topic of overpopulation with The Population Bomb (1968).

However, many predictions of overpopulation during the 20th century did not materialize.[102][31] In The Population Bomb, Ehrlich stated, "In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now,"[105] with later editions changing to "in the 1980s".[6] Despite admitting some of his earlier predictions did not come to pass, Ehrlich continues to advocate that overpopulation is a major issue.[102]

As the profile of environmental issues facing humanity increased during the end of the 20th and the early 21st centuries, some have looked to population growth as a root cause. In the 2000s, E. O. Wilson and Ron Nielsen discussed overpopulation as a threat to the quality of human life.[106][107]:37–39 In 2011, Pentti Linkola argued that human overpopulation represents a threat to Earth's biosphere.[108] A 2015 survey from Pew Research Center reports that 82% of scientists associated with the American Association for the Advancement of Science were concerned about population growth.[109] In 2017, more than one-third of 50 Nobel prize-winning scientists surveyed by the Times Higher Education at the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings said that human overpopulation and environmental degradation are the two greatest threats facing mankind.[110] In November that same year, the World Scientists' Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice, signed by 15,364 scientists from 184 countries, indicated that rapid human population growth is "a primary driver behind many ecological and even societal threats."[28] Ehlrich and other scientists at a conference in the Vatican on contemporary species extinction linked the issue to population growth in 2017, and advocated for human population control, which attracted controversy from the Catholic church.[111] In 2019, a warning on climate change signed by 11,000 scientists from 153 nations said that human population growth adds 80 million humans annually, and "the world population must be stabilized—and, ideally, gradually reduced—within a framework that ensures social integrity" to reduce the impact of "population growth on GHG emissions and biodiversity loss."[29][112]

In 2020, a quote from David Attenborough about how humans have "overrun the planet" was shared widely online and became his most popular comment on the internet.[113]

Key arguments

Overconsumption

The World Wide Fund for Nature[114][115] (WWF) and Global Footprint Network have argued that the annual biocapacity of Earth has exceeded, as measured using the ecological footprint. In 2006, WWF's Living Planet Report stated that in order for all humans to live with the current consumption patterns of Europeans, we would be spending three times more than what the planet can renew.[116] According to these calculations, humanity as a whole was using by 2006 40% more than what Earth can regenerate.[117] Another study by the WWF in 2014 found that it would take the equivalent of 1.5 Earths of bio-capacity to meet humanity's current levels of consumption.[118] However, Roger Martin of Population Matters states the view: "the poor want to get rich, and I want them to get rich," with a later addition, "of course we have to change consumption habits,... but we've also got to stabilize our numbers".[119]

Critics have questioned the simplifications and statistical methods used in calculating ecological footprints. Therefore, Global Footprint Network and its partner organizations have engaged with national governments and international agencies to test the results—reviews have been produced by France, Germany, the European Commission, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Japan and the United Arab Emirates.[120] Some point out that a more refined method of assessing Ecological Footprint is to designate sustainable versus non-sustainable categories of consumption.[121][122]

Carrying capacity

Attempts have been made to estimate the world's carrying capacity for humans; the maximum population the world can host.[123] A 2004 meta-analysis of 69 such studies from 1694 until 2001 found the average predicted maximum number of people the Earth would ever have was 7.7 billion people, with lower and upper meta-bounds at 0.65 and 98 billion people, respectively. They conclude: "recent predictions of stabilized world population levels for 2050 exceed several of our meta-estimates of a world population limit".[124]

A 2012 United Nations report summarized 65 different estimated maximum sustainable population sizes and the most common estimate was 8 billion.[125] Advocates of reduced population often put forward much lower numbers. Paul R. Ehrlich stated in 2018 that the optimum population is between 1.5 and 2 billion.[126] In 2022 Ehrlich and other contributors to the "Scientists' warning on population", including Eileen Crist, William J. Ripple, William E. Rees and Christopher Wolf, stated that environmental analysts put the sustainable level of human population at between 2 and 4 billion people.[14] Geographer Chris Tucker estimates that 3 billion is a sustainable number.[127]

Critics of overpopulation criticize the basic assumptions associated with these estimates. For example, associate professor of gender and sexuality Jade Sasser believes that calculating a maximum of number of humanity is unethical claiming that only some, mostly European former colonial powers, are mostly responsible for unsustainably using up Earth's resources.[128]

Proposed impacts

Poverty, and infant and child mortality

Although proponents of human overpopulation have expressed concern that growing population will lead to an increase in global poverty and infant mortality, both indicators have declined over the last 200 years of population growth.[58][129]

Environmental impacts

A number of scientists have argued that human impacts on the environment and accompanying increase in resource consumption threatens the world's ecosystems and the survival of human civilization.[130][131][132][133] The InterAcademy Panel Statement on Population Growth, which was ratified by 58 member national academies in 1994, states that "unprecedented" population growth aggravates many environmental problems, including rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide, global warming, and pollution.[134] Indeed, some analysts claim that overpopulation's most serious impact is its effect on the environment.[135] Some scientists suggest that the overall human impact on the environment during the Great Acceleration, particularly due to human population size and growth, economic growth, overconsumption, pollution, and proliferation of technology, has pushed the planet into a new geological epoch known as the Anthropocene.[136][137]

Biomass of mammals on Earth[138][139]

  Livestock, mostly cattle and pigs (60%)
  Humans (36%)
  Wild animals (4%)

Some studies and commentary link population growth with climate change.[145] Critics have stated that population growth alone may have less influence on climate change than other factors, such as greenhouse gas emissions per capita.[146][103] The global consumption of meat is projected to rise by as much as 76% by 2050 as the global population increases, with this projected to have further environmental impacts such as biodiversity loss and increased greenhouse gas emissions.[147][148][149] A July 2017 study published in Environmental Research Letters argued that the most significant way individuals could mitigate their own carbon footprint is to have fewer children, followed by living without a vehicle, forgoing air travel, and adopting a plant-based diet.[150] However, even in countries which have both large population growth and major ecological problems, it is not necessarily true that curbing the population growth will make a major contribution towards resolving all environmental problems that can be solved simply with an environmentalist policy approach.[151]

Continued population growth and overconsumption, particularly by the wealthy, have been posited as key drivers of biodiversity loss and contemporary species extinction,[152][153][133][21] with some researchers and environmentalists specifically suggesting this indicates a human overpopulation scenario.[8][154][25] The Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, released by IPBES in 2019, states that human population growth is a factor in biodiversity loss.[155][156] IGI Global has uncovered the growth of the human population caused encroachment in wild habitats which have led to their destruction, "posing a potential threat to biodiversity components".[157]

Some scientists and environmentalists, including Jared Diamond,[158] E. O. Wilson, Jane Goodall[159] and David Attenborough,[160] contend that population growth is devastating to biodiversity. Wilson for example, has expressed concern when Homo sapiens reached a population of six billion their biomass exceeded that of any other large land dwelling animal species that had ever existed by over 100 times.[154] Inger Andersen, the executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme, stated in December 2022 as the human population reached a milestone of 8 billion and as delegates were meeting for the 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference, that "we need to understand that the more people there are, the more we put the Earth under heavy pressure. As far as biodiversity is concerned, we are at war with nature."[161]

Human overpopulation and continued population growth are also considered by some, including animal rights attorney Doris Lin and philosopher Steven Best, to be an animal rights issue, as more human activity means the destruction of animal habitats and more direct killing of animals.[162][147]:146

Resource depletion

Some commentary has attributed depletion of non-renewable resources, such as land, food and water, to overpopulation[163] and suggested it could lead to a diminished quality of human life.[107] Ecologist David Pimentel was one such proponent, saying "with the imbalance growing between population numbers and vital life sustaining resources, humans must actively conserve cropland, freshwater, energy, and biological resources. There is a need to develop renewable energy resources. Humans everywhere must understand that rapid population growth damages the Earth's resources and diminishes human well-being."[164][165]

Growth in food production has been greater than population growth.

Although food shortages have been warned as a consequence of overpopulation, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization, global food production exceeds increasing demand from global population growth.[54][166] Food insecurity in some regions is attributable to the globally unequal distribution of food supplies.[54]

The notion that space is limited has been decried by skeptics,[167] who point out that the Earth's population of roughly 6.8 billion people could comfortably be housed an area comparable in size to the state of Texas in the United States (about 269,000 square miles or 696,706.80 square kilometres).[168] Critics and agricultural experts suggest changes to policies relating to land use or agriculture to make them more efficient would be more likely to resolve land issues and pressures on the environment than focusing on reducing population alone.[146][166]

Water scarcity, which threatens agricultural productivity, represents a global issue that some have linked to population growth.[169][170][171] Colin Butler wrote in The Lancet in 1994 that overpopulation also has economic consequences for certain countries due to resource use.[172]

Political systems and social conflict

It was speculated by Aldous Huxley in 1958 that democracy is threatened by overpopulation, and could give rise to totalitarian style governments.[173] Physics professor Albert Allen Bartlett at the University of Colorado Boulder warned in 2000 that overpopulation and the development of technology are the two major causes of the diminution of democracy.[174] However, over the last 200 years of population growth, the actual level of personal freedom has increased rather than declined.[129] John Harte has argued population growth is a factor in numerous social issues, including unemployment, overcrowding, bad governance and decaying infrastructure.[133][175] Daron Acemoglu and others suggested in a 2017 paper that since the Second World War, countries with higher population growth rates experienced the most social conflict.[133][176]

Some advocates have suggested societal problems such as hunger and mass unemployment are linked to overpopulation.[110][29][133]

According to anthropologist Jason Hickel, the global capitalist system creates pressures for population growth: "more people means more labour, cheaper labour, and more consumers."[177] He and his colleagues have also demonstrated that capitalist elites throughout recent history have "used pro-natalist state policies to prevent women from practicing family planning" in order to grow the size of their workforce.[178] Hickel has however argued that the cause of negative environmental impacts is resource extraction by wealthy countries.[179] He concludes that "we should not ignore the relationship between population growth and ecology, but we must not treat these as operating in a social and political vacuum."[178]

Epidemics and pandemics

A 2021 article in Ethics, Medicine and Public Health argued in light of the COVID-19 pandemic that epidemics and pandemics were made more likely by overpopulation, globalization, urbanization and encroachment into natural habitats.[180]

They both play a significant role impact on human populations, including widespread illness, death, and social disruption. While they can leave to a temporarily loss of population but is followed by significant loss and suffering. These events is not the sole reason for overpopulation but lack of access to family planning and reproductive contraptions, poverty and resource depletion.[181]

Proposed solutions and mitigation measures

Several strategies have been proposed to mitigate overpopulation.

Population planning

Several scientists (including Paul Ehrlich, Gretchen Daily and Tim Flannery[142][182]) proposed that humanity should work at stabilizing its absolute numbers, as a starting point towards beginning the process of reducing the total numbers. They suggested several possible approaches, including:[183][184]

There is good evidence from many parts of the world that when women and couples have the freedom to choose how many children to have, they tend to have smaller families.[190][191][192]  

Some scientists, such as Corey Bradshaw and Barry Brook, suggest that, given the "inexorable demographic momentum of the global human population," sustainability can be achieved more rapidly with a short term focus on technological and social innovations, along with reducing consumption rates, while treating population planning as a long-term goal.[193][194]

However, most scientists believe that achieving genuine sustainability is a long-term project, and that addressing population and consumption levels are both essential to achieving it.

In 1992, more than 1700 scientists from around the world signed onto a "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity," including a majority of the living Nobel prize-winners in the sciences.[195] "The earth is finite," they wrote. "Its ability to absorb wastes and destructive effluent is finite. Its ability to provide food and energy is finite. Its ability to provide for growing numbers of people is finite. And we are fast approaching many of the earth's limits."[195] The warning noted:

Pressures resulting from unrestrained population growth put demands on the natural world that can overwhelm any efforts to achieve a sustainable future. If we are to halt the destruction of our environment, we must accept limits to that growth.[195]

Two of the five areas where the signatories requested immediate action were "stabilize population" and "ensure sexual equality, and guarantee women control over their own reproductive decisions."[195]

In a follow-up message 25 years later, William Ripple and colleagues issued the "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice."[196] This time more than 15,000 scientists from around the world signed on.[197] "We are jeopardizing our future by not reining in our intense but geographically and demographically uneven material consumption and by not perceiving continued rapid population growth as a primary driver behind many ecological and even societal threats," they wrote.[198] "By failing to adequately limit population growth, reassess the role of an economy rooted in growth, reduce greenhouse gases, incentivize renewable energy, protect habitat, restore ecosystems, curb pollution, halt defaunation, and constrain invasive alien species, humanity is not taking the urgent steps needed to safeguard our imperilled biosphere."[198] This second scientists’ warning urged attention to both excessive consumption and continued population growth. Like its predecessor, it did not specify a definite global human carrying capacity. But its call to action included "estimating a scientifically defensible, sustainable human population size for the long term while rallying nations and leaders to support that vital goal."[199]  

Subsequent scientists' calls to action have also included calls for population planning. The 2020 "World Scientists' Warning of a Climate Emergency" stated: "Economic and population growth are among the most important drivers of increases in CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion." "Therefore," the study noted: "we need bold and drastic transformations regarding economic and population policies."[200] "The world population must be stabilized—and, ideally, gradually reduced,"[201] it concluded, implying that humanity is overpopulated given current and expected levels of resource use and waste generation.

A follow-up scientists’ warning on climate change in 2021 reiterated the need to plan and limit human numbers to achieve sustainability, proposing as a goal "stabilizing and gradually reducing the [global] population by providing voluntary family planning and supporting education and rights for all girls and young women, which has been proven to lower fertility rates."[202]

Family planning

A family planning placard in Ethiopia. It depicts negative effects of having more children than people can care for.

Education and empowerment of women and giving access to family planning and contraception have a demonstrated impact on reducing birthrates.[203] Many studies conclude that educating girls reduces the number of children they have.[203] One option according to some activists is to focus on education about family planning and birth control methods, and to make birth-control devices like condoms, contraceptive pills and intrauterine devices easily available. Worldwide, nearly 40% of pregnancies are unintended (some 80 million unintended pregnancies each year).[204] An estimated 350 million women in the poorest countries of the world either did not want their last child, do not want another child or want to space their pregnancies, but they lack access to information, affordable means and services to determine the size and spacing of their families. In the developing world, some 514,000 women die annually of complications from pregnancy and abortion,[205] with 86% of these deaths occurring in the sub-Saharan Africa region and South Asia.[206] Additionally, 8 million infants die, many because of malnutrition or preventable diseases, especially from lack of access to clean drinking water.[207]

Women's rights and their reproductive rights in particular are issues regarded to have vital importance in the debate.[103] Anthropologist Jason Hickel asserts that a nation's population growth rapidly declines - even within a single generation - when policies relating to women's health and reproductive rights, children's health (to ensure parents they will survive to adulthood), and expanding education and economic opportunities for girls and women are implemented.[208]

A 2020 paper by William J. Ripple and other scientists argued in favor of population policies that could advance social justice (such as by abolishing child marriage, expanding family planning services and reforms that improve education for women and girls) and at the same time mitigate the impact of population growth on climate change and biodiversity loss.[143] In a 2022 warning on population published by Science of the Total Environment, Ripple, Ehrlich and other scientists appealed to families around the world to have no more than one child and also urged policy-makers to improve education for young females and provide high-quality family-planning services.[14]

Extraterrestrial settlement

An argument for space colonization is to mitigate proposed impacts of overpopulation of Earth, such as resource depletion.[209] If the resources of space were opened to use and viable life-supporting habitats were built, Earth would no longer define the limitations of growth. Although many of Earth's resources are non-renewable, off-planet colonies could satisfy the majority of the planet's resource requirements. With the availability of extraterrestrial resources, demand on terrestrial ones would decline.[210] Proponents of this idea include Stephen Hawking[211] and Gerard K. O'Neill.[212]

Others including cosmologist Carl Sagan and science fiction writers Arthur C. Clarke,[213] and Isaac Asimov,[214] have argued that shipping any excess population into space is not a viable solution to human overpopulation. According to Clarke, "the population battle must be fought or won here on Earth".[213] The problem for these authors is not the lack of resources in space (as shown in books such as Mining the Sky[215]), but the physical impracticality of shipping vast numbers of people into space to "solve" overpopulation on Earth.

Urbanization

Despite the increase in population density within cities (and the emergence of megacities), UN Habitat Data Corp. states in its reports that urbanization may be the best compromise in the face of global population growth.[216] Cities concentrate human activity within limited areas, limiting the breadth of environmental damage.[217] UN Habitat says this is only possible if urban planning is significantly improved.[218]

Paul R. Ehrlich proposed in The Population Bomb that rhetoric supporting the increase of city density is a means of avoiding dealing with what he views as the root problem of overpopulation and has been promoted by what he views as the same interests that have allegedly profited from population increase (such as property developers, the banking system which invests in property development, industry, and municipal councils).[219] Subsequent authors point to growth economics as driving governments seek city growth and expansion at any cost, disregarding the impact it might have on the environment.[220]

Criticism

Global fertility rates as of 2020. About half of the world population lives in nations with sub-replacement fertility.[221]

The concept of human overpopulation, and its attribution as a cause of environmental issues, are controversial.[59][31][222][61][113]

Some critics, including Nicholas Eberstadt, Fred Pearce, Dominic Lawson and Betsy Hartmann, refer to overpopulation as a myth.[62][54][223][224][18] Predicted exponential population growth or any "population explosion" did not materialise; instead, population growth slowed.[102][32] Critics suggest that enough resources are available to support projected population growth, and that human impacts on the environment are not attributable to overpopulation.[159][113][224]

According to libertarian think tank the Fraser Institute, both the idea of overpopulation and the alleged depletion of resources are myths; most resources are now more abundant than a few decades ago, thanks to technological progress.[225] The institute also questions the sincerity of advocates of population control in poor countries.[225][226]

Nicholas Eberstadt, a political economist, has criticised the idea of overpopulation, saying that "overpopulation is not really overpopulation. It is a question of poverty".[54]

A 2020 study in The Lancet concluded that "continued trends in female educational attainment and access to contraception will hasten declines in fertility and slow population growth", with projections suggesting world population would peak at 9.73 billion in 2064 and fall by 2100.[227] Media commentary interpreted this as suggesting overconsumption represents a greater environmental threat as an overpopulation scenario may never occur.[59][228]

Some human population planning strategies advocated by proponents of overpopulation are controversial for ethical reasons. Those concerned with overpopulation, including Paul Ehrlich, have been accused of influencing human rights abuses including forced sterilisation policies in India and under China's one-child policy, as well as mandatory or coercive birth control measures taken in other countries.[3][229][32][230]

Women's rights

Influential advocates such as Betsy Hartmann consider the "myth of overpopulation" to be destructive as it "prevents constructive thinking and action on reproductive rights," which acutely affects women and communities of women in poverty.[223] The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) defines reproductive rights as "the basic right of all couples and individuals to decide freely and responsibly the number, spacing, and timing of their children and to have the information to do so."[231] This oversimplification of human overpopulation leads individuals to believe there are simple solutions and the creation of population policies that limit reproductive rights.

In response, philosopher Tim Meijers asks the question: "To what extent is it fair to require people to refrain from procreating as part of a strategy to make the world more sustainable?"[232] Meijers rejects the idea that the right to reproduce can be unlimited, since this would not be universalizable: "in a world in which everybody had many children, extreme scarcity would arise and stable institutions could prove unsustainable. This would lead to violation of (rather uncontroversial) rights such as the right to life and to health and subsistence."[232] In the actual world today, excessive procreation could also undermine our descendants' right to have children, since people are likely to refrain (and perhaps should refrain) from bringing children into an insecure and dangerous world. Meijers, Sarah Conly, Diana Coole, and other ethicists conclude that people have a right to found a family, but not to unlimited numbers of children.[232][233][33][234]

Coercive population control policies

Ehrlich advocated in The Population Bomb that "various forms of coercion", such as removing tax benefits for having additional children, be used in cases when voluntary population planning policies fail.[102] Some nations, like China, have used strict or coercive measures such as the one-child policy to reduce birth rates.[235] Compulsory or semi-compulsory sterilization, such as for token material compensation or easing of penalties,[236] has also been implemented in many countries as a form of population control.[237][3]

Another choice-based approach is financial compensation or other benefits by the state offered to people who voluntarily undergo sterilization. Such policies have been introduced by the government of India.[238][229][32]

The Indian government of Narendra Modi introduced population policies in the 21st century, including offering incentives for sterilization by citing the risks of a "population explosion" although demographers have criticized that basis, with India thought to be undergoing demographic transition and its fertility rate falling. The policies have also received criticism from human and women's rights groups.[32][239]

Racism

The concept of human overpopulation has been criticized by some scholars and environmentalists as being racist and having roots in colonialism and white supremacy, since control and reduction of human population is often focused on the global south, instead of on overconsumption and the global north, where it occurs.[222][240][61][159][241] Paul Ehrlich's Population Bomb begins with him describing first knowing the "feel of overpopulation" from a visit to Delhi, which some critics have accused of having racial undertones.[242] George Monbiot has said "when affluent white people wrongly transfer the blame for their environmental impacts on to the birthrate of much poorer brown and black people, their finger-pointing reinforces [Great Replacement and white genocide conspiracy] narratives. It is inherently racist."[19] Overpopulation is a common component of ecofascist ideology.[240][113][243]

Scholar Heather Alberro rejects the overpopulation argument, stating that the human population growth is rapidly slowing down, the underlying problem is not the number of people, but how resources are distributed and that the idea of overpopulation could fuel a racist backlash against the population of poor countries.[159]

In response, population activists argue that overpopulation is a problem in both rich and poor countries, and arguably a worse problem in rich countries, where residents’ higher per capita consumption ratchets up the impacts of their excessive numbers.[192] Feminist scholar Donna Haraway notes that a commitment to enlarging the moral community to include nonhuman beings logically entails people’s willingness to limit their numbers and make room for them.[244] Ecological economists like Herman Daly and Joshua Farley believe that reducing populations will make it easier to achieve steady-state economies that decrease total consumption and pollution to manageable levels.[245] Finally, as Karin Kuhlemann observes, "that a population's size is stable in no way entails sustainability. It may be sustainable, or it may be far too large."[246]

According to the writer and journalist Krithika Varagur, myths and misinformation about overpopulation of Rohingya people in Myanmar is thought to have driven their genocide in the 2010s.[247]

Advocacy organizations

The following organizations advocate for a limit to human population growth, although their focus may be on related issues such as environmental protection:

Organization advocate against limits to human population growth.[249]

See also

Notes

    References

    1. Roser, Max (18 June 2019). "Two centuries of rapid global population growth will come to an end". Our World in Data.
    2. World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results (PDF) (Report). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. 2022. UN DESA/POP/2022/TR/NO.3.
    3. Mann, Charles C. "The Book That Incited a Worldwide Fear of Overpopulation". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
    4. Vollset, Stein Emil; Goren, Emily; Yuan, Chun-Wei; Cao, Jackie; Smith, Amanda E.; Hsiao, Thomas; Bisignano, Catherine; Azhar, Gulrez S.; Castro, Emma; Chalek, Julian; Dolgert, Andrew J. (17 October 2020). "Fertility, mortality, migration, and population scenarios for 195 countries and territories from 2017 to 2100: a forecasting analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study". The Lancet. 396 (10258): 1285–1306. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30677-2. ISSN 0140-6736. PMC 7561721. PMID 32679112.
    5. Gerland, P.; Raftery, A. E.; Ev Ikova, H.; Li, N.; Gu, D.; Spoorenberg, T.; Alkema, L.; Fosdick, B. K.; Chunn, J.; Lalic, N.; Bay, G.; Buettner, T.; Heilig, G. K.; Wilmoth, J. (14 September 2014). "World population stabilization unlikely this century". Science. AAAS. 346 (6206): 234–7. Bibcode:2014Sci...346..234G. doi:10.1126/science.1257469. ISSN 1095-9203. PMC 4230924. PMID 25301627.
    6. "Human Overpopulation: Still an Issue of Concern?". Scientific American. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
    7. Fletcher, Robert; Breitling, Jan; Puleo, Valerie (9 August 2014). "Barbarian hordes: the overpopulation scapegoat in international development discourse". Third World Quarterly. 35 (7): 1195–1215. doi:10.1080/01436597.2014.926110. ISSN 0143-6597. S2CID 144569008.
    8. Ceballos, Gerardo; Ehrlich, Paul R; Dirzo, Rodolfo (23 May 2017). "Biological annihilation via the ongoing sixth mass extinction signaled by vertebrate population losses and declines". PNAS. 114 (30): E6089–E6096. Bibcode:2017PNAS..114E6089C. doi:10.1073/pnas.1704949114. PMC 5544311. PMID 28696295. Much less frequently mentioned are, however, the ultimate drivers of those immediate causes of biotic destruction, namely, human overpopulation and continued population growth, and overconsumption, especially by the rich. These drivers, all of which trace to the fiction that perpetual growth can occur on a finite planet, are themselves increasing rapidly.
    9. Ehrlich, Paul; Ehrlich, Anne (2013). "Can a collapse of global civilization be avoided?". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 280 (1754): 20122845. doi:10.1098/rspb.2012.2845. PMC 3574335. PMID 23303549. S2CID 2822298.
    10. Paul Ehrlich; Anne H. Ehrlich (4 August 2008). "Too Many People, Too Much Consumption". Yale Environment 360. Yale School of the Environment. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
    11. Ehrlich, Paul R. Ehrlich & Anne H. (1990). The population explosion. London: Hutchinson. pp. 39–40. ISBN 978-0091745516. Retrieved 20 July 2014. When is an area overpopulated? When its population cannot be maintained without rapidly depleting nonrenewable resources [39] (or converting renewable resources into nonrenewable ones) and without decreasing the capacity of the environment to support the population. In short, if the long-term carrying capacity of an area is clearly being degraded by its current human occupants, that area is overpopulated.
    12. Ehrlich, Paul R; Ehrlich, Anne H (2004), One with Nineveh: Politics, Consumption, and the Human Future, Island Press/Shearwater Books, pp. 76–180, 256
    13. Ehrlich, Paul R; Ehrlich, Anne H (1991), Healing the Planet: Strategies for Resolving the Environmental Crisis, Addison-Wesley Books, pp. 6–8, 12, 75, 96, 241
    14. Crist, Eileen; Ripple, William J.; Ehrlich, Paul R.; Rees, William E.; Wolf, Christopher (2022). "Scientists' warning on population" (PDF). Science of the Total Environment. 845: 157166. Bibcode:2022ScTEn.845o7166C. doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157166. PMID 35803428. S2CID 250387801.
    15. Brashares, Justin; Arcese, Peter; Sam, Moses (2001). "Human demography and reserve size predict wildlife extinction in West Africa". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences. 268 (1484): 2473–2478. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1815. PMC 1088902. PMID 11747566.
    16. Daily, Gretchen; Ehrlich, Anne; Ehrlich, Paul (1994). "Optimum human population size". Population and Environment. 15 (6): 469–475. doi:10.1007/BF02211719. S2CID 153761569.
    17. Dasgupta, Partha (2019). Time and the Generations: Population Ethics for a Diminishing Planet. Columbia University Press.
    18. Rao, Mohan (1994). "An Imagined Reality: Malthusianism, Neo-Malthusianism and Population Myth". Economic and Political Weekly. 29 (5): PE40–PE52. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 4400725.
    19. "Population panic lets rich people off the hook for the climate crisis they are causing | George Monbiot". The Guardian. 26 August 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
    20. Bradshaw, Corey J. A.; Ehrlich, Paul R.; Beattie, Andrew; Ceballos, Gerardo; Crist, Eileen; Diamond, Joan; Dirzo, Rodolfo; Ehrlich, Anne H.; Harte, John; Harte, Mary Ellen; Pyke, Graham; Raven, Peter H.; Ripple, William J.; Saltré, Frédérik; Turnbull, Christine; Wackernagel, Mathis; Blumstein, Daniel T. (2021). "Response: Commentary: Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future". Frontiers in Conservation Science. 2. doi:10.3389/fcosc.2021.700869. On the contrary, we devoted an entire section to the interacting and inter-dependent components of overpopulation and overconsumption, which are, for instance, also central tenets of the recent Economics of Biodiversity review (Dasgupta, 2021). Therein, the dynamic socio-ecological model shows that mutual causation drives modern socio-ecological systems. Just as it is incorrect to insist that a large global population is the sole underlying cause of biodiversity loss, so too is it naïve and incorrect to claim that high consumption alone is the cause, and so forth.
    21. Dasgupta, Partha (2021). "The Economics of Biodiversity: The Dasgupta Review Headline Messages" (PDF). UK government. p. 3. Retrieved 15 December 2021. Growing human populations have significant implications for our demands on Nature, including for future patterns of global consumption.
    22. Carrington, Damian (2 February 2021). "Economics of biodiversity review: what are the recommendations?". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
    23. O’Neill, Brian C.; Jiang, Leiwen; Gerland, Patrick (10 February 2015). "Plausible reductions in future population growth and implications for the environment". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (6): E506. Bibcode:2015PNAS..112E.506O. doi:10.1073/pnas.1421989112. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4330723. PMID 25617373.
    24. O'Neill, Brian C.; Dalton, Michael; Fuchs, Regina; Jiang, Leiwen; Pachauri, Shonali; Zigova, Katarina (12 October 2010). "Global demographic trends and future carbon emissions". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (41): 17521–17526. Bibcode:2010PNAS..10717521O. doi:10.1073/pnas.1004581107. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2955139. PMID 20937861.
    25. Cafaro, Philip; Hansson, Pernilla; Götmark, Frank (August 2022). "Overpopulation is a major cause of biodiversity loss and smaller human populations are necessary to preserve what is left" (PDF). Biological Conservation. 272. 109646. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2022.109646. ISSN 0006-3207. S2CID 250185617.
    26. Beebee, Trevor J. C. (9 June 2022). Impacts of Human Population on Wildlife. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108985260. ISBN 978-1-108-98526-0. S2CID 249562874.
    27. Ceballos, Gerardo; Ehrlich, Paul R. (2023). "Mutilation of the tree of life via mass extinction of animal genera". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 120 (39): e2306987120. doi:10.1073/pnas.2306987120. PMC 10523489. PMID 37722053.
    28. Ripple WJ, Wolf C, Newsome TM, Galetti M, Alamgir M, Crist E, Mahmoud MI, Laurance WF (13 November 2017). "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice" (PDF). BioScience. 67 (12): 1026–1028. doi:10.1093/biosci/bix125. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 December 2019. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
    29. Ripple, William J.; Wolf, Christopher; Newsome, Thomas M; Barnard, Phoebe; Moomaw, William R (5 November 2019). "World Scientists' Warning of a Climate Emergency". BioScience. doi:10.1093/biosci/biz088. hdl:1808/30278. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
    30. Crist, Eileen; Kopnina, Helen; Cafaro, Philip; Gray, Joe; Ripple, William J.; Safina, Carl; Davis, John; DellaSala, Dominick A.; Noss, Reed F.; Washington, Haydn; Rolston, Holmes; Taylor, Bron; Orlikowska, Ewa H.; Heister, Anja; Lynn, William S. (2021). "Protecting Half the Planet and Transforming Human Systems Are Complementary Goals". Frontiers in Conservation Science. 2. doi:10.3389/fcosc.2021.761292. ISSN 2673-611X. Population growth can end and numbers can be gradually lowered within a human-rights framework. Lowering human numbers is achievable by expanding and protecting human rights, especially for children and women . . . A smaller human population will facilitate the conservation of a biodiverse planet while also supporting a higher quality of life for people by lowering pollution levels, preempting resource conflicts, ameliorating overcrowding in urban centers, and empowering girls and women
    31. Piper, Kelsey (20 August 2019). "We've worried about overpopulation for centuries. And we've always been wrong". Vox. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
    32. "'Population Explosion': The Myth that Refuses to Go". The Wire. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
    33. Coole, Diana (8 August 2018). Should we control world population?. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-5095-2344-3. OCLC 1162049054.
    34. Nove, Alec (1992) [1969]. An Economic History of the USSR, 1917–1991 (3rd ed.). New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0140157741.
    35. Schuettinger, Robert; Butler, Eamonn (1979). Forty Centuries of Wage and Price Controls: How Not to Fight Inflation. Washington, DC: The Heritage Foundation. ISBN 978-0891950257.
    36. Sen, Amartya (1982) [1981]. Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation (Reprint ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198284635.
    37. Rockoff, Hugh (2004) [1984]. Drastic Measures: A History of Wage and Price Controls in the United States (Paperback ed.). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521522038.
    38. Becker, Jasper (1998) [1997]. Hungry Ghosts: Mao's Secret Famine (2nd ed.). New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 978-0805056686.
    39. Courtois, Stéphane; Werth, Nicolas; Panné, Jean-Louis; Paczkowski, Andrzej; Bartošek, Karel; Margolin, Jean-Louis (1999) [1997]. The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression. Translated by Murphy, Jonathan; Kramer, Mark. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674076082.
    40. Sen, Amartya (2001) [1999]. Development As Freedom (2nd ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192893307.
    41. Davies, R. W.; Wheatcroft, Stephen G. (2004). The Years of Hunger: Soviet Agriculture, 1931–1933. Basingstoke, England: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0230238558.
    42. Dikötter, Frank (2017) [2010]. Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–1962. London, England: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1408886366.
    43. Hasell, Joe; Roser, Max (7 December 2017). "Famines". Our World in Data. Global Change Data Lab. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
    44. Kuznets, Simon; Quandt, Richard E.; Friedman, Milton (1960). "Population Change and Aggregate Output" (PDF). Demographic and Economic Change in Developed Countries (Reprint ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 324–351. ISBN 978-0870143021.
    45. Kuhn, Thomas (2012) [1962]. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (4th ed.). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226458120.
    46. Simon, Julian L. (2019) [1977]. The Economics of Population Growth (Reprint ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691656298.
    47. Simon, Julian L. (1981). The Ultimate Resource. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 069109389X.
    48. Kremer, Michael (1993). "Population Growth and Technological Change: One Million B.C. to 1990". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. 108 (3): 681–716. doi:10.2307/2118405. JSTOR 2118405. S2CID 139085606.
    49. Simon, Julian L. (1996). The Ultimate Resource 2. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691042691.
    50. Ausubel, Jesse H.; Wernick, Iddo K.; Waggoner, Paul E. (2013). "Peak Farmland and the Prospect for Land Sparing". Population and Development Review. 38 (s1): 221–242. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2013.00561.x.
    51. Ritchie, Hannah (22 August 2017). "Yields vs. Land Use: How the Green Revolution enabled us to feed a growing population". Our World in Data. Global Change Data Lab. Retrieved 9 March 2023.
    52. Ritchie, Hannah; Roser, Max (2019). "Land Use". Our World in Data. Global Change Data Lab. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
    53. Azoulay, Pierre; Fons-Rosen, Christian; Graff Zivin, Joshua S. (2019). "Does Science Advance One Funeral at a Time?". American Economic Review. American Economic Association. 109 (8): 2889–2920. doi:10.1257/aer.20161574. PMC 6814193. PMID 31656315.
    54. Scudellari, Megan (1 December 2015). "The science myths that will not die". Nature. 528 (7582): 322–325. Bibcode:2015Natur.528..322S. doi:10.1038/528322a. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 26672537. S2CID 1414926.
    55. "World Population Prospects 2019". United Nations, Dept of Economic and Social Affairs. 2019.
    56. "World Population Prospects 2019, Population Data, File: Total Population Both Sexes, Medium Variant tab". United Nations Population Division. 2019.
    57. "World Population Prospects 2019, Dept of Economic and Social Affairs, File: Total Fertility". United Nations Population Division. 2019.
    58. "Does population growth lead to hunger and famine?". Our World in Data. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
    59. "What fewer people on the planet would mean for the environment | DW | 31.08.2020". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
    60. "The spectre of "overpopulation"". Transnational Institute. 7 December 2009. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
    61. Roberts, David (26 September 2017). ""I'm an environmental journalist, but I never write about overpopulation. Here's why."". Vox. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
    62. Pearce, Fred (8 March 2010). "The Overpopulation Myth". Prospect Magazine.
    63. "Black death 'discriminated' between victims". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 29 January 2008. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 3 November 2008.
    64. Roser, Max; Ritchie, Hannah; Ortiz-Ospina, Esteban (9 May 2013). "World Population Growth". Our World in Data.
    65. Pimentel, David. "Overpopulation and sustainability." Petroleum Review 59 (2006): 34–36.
    66. Hayami, Yujiro, and Vernon W. Ruttan. "Population growth and agricultural productivity." Technological Prospects and Population Trends. Routledge, 2020. 11–69.
    67. Smil, Vaclav (1999). "Detonator of the population explosion" (PDF). Nature. 400 (6743): 415. Bibcode:1999Natur.400..415S. doi:10.1038/22672. S2CID 4301828.
    68. United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2022). World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results. UN DESA/POP/2022/TR/NO. 3, p. 1
    69. "World Population Clock: 8 Billion People (LIVE, 2022) - Worldometer". www.worldometers.info. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
    70. Hopfenberg, Russell and Pimentel, David, "Human Population Numbers as a Function of Food Supply", Environment, Development and Sustainability, vol. 3, no. 1, March 2001, pp. 1–15
    71. "Human Carrying Capacity is Determined by Food Availability" (PDF). Russel Hopfenberg, Duke University. Population media center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 September 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
    72. Hopfenberg, Russel. "A Summary of Human Population Dynamics" (PDF). Population institute of Canada.
    73. Abernathy, Virginia, Population Politics ISBN 0-7658-0603-7
    74. Max Roser; Hannah Ritchie; Esteban Ortiz-Ospina (2013). "World Population Growth". Our World in Data. Archived from the original on 22 November 2021.
    75. "World Population Prospects 2019, Volume II: Demographic Profiles" (PDF). United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 July 2021.
    76. "Population, total". World Bank Open Data. Archived from the original on 3 January 2022.
    77. "A Brief Introduction to the History of Climate". Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
    78. "Plague, Plague Information, Black Death Facts, News, Photos". National Geographic. Retrieved 3 November 2008.
    79. "Epidemics and pandemics: their impacts on human history". J. N. Hays (2005). p.46. ISBN 1-85109-658-2
    80. "Historical Estimates of World Population". Census.gov. Archived from the original on 13 October 2013. Retrieved 3 November 2008.
    81. "International Programs". census.gov. Archived from the original on 13 October 2013.
    82. "modelling exponential growth" (PDF). esrl.noaa.gov.
    83. "The limits of a Green Revolution?". BBC News. 29 March 2007.
    84. "United Nations, United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2011): World Population Prospects: The 2010 Revision". Archived from the original on 12 May 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
    85. Benatar, David (2008). Better Never to Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence. Oxford University Press. p. 167. ISBN 978-0199549269.
    86. World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results (PDF) (Report). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. 2022. UN DESA/POP/2022/TR/NO.3.
    87. "World Population Prospects: The 2017 Revision" (PDF). United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2018. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
    88. "Population Projections". United States Census Bureau.
    89. Kaneda, Toshiko (June 2014). "Understanding Population Projections: Assumptions Behind the Numbers" (PDF). Population Reference Bureau.
    90. Roser, Max (9 May 2013). "Future Population Growth". Our World in Data.
    91. World Population Prospects 2022: Summary of Results (PDF) (Report). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. 2022. p. 28. UN DESA/POP/2022/TR/NO.3.
    92. Nations, United. "Population". United Nations. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
    93. "World population growth is expected to nearly stop by 2100". Pew Research Center. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
    94. "Population explosion is over". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
    95. Joseph A. Tainter (2006). "Archaeology of Overshoot and Collapse". Annual Review of Anthropology. 35: 59–74. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.35.081705.123136.
    96. "VII, paragraph 10, lines 8–10". An Essay on the Principle of Population. London: J. Johnson. 1798. The power of population is so superior to the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race
    97. Gregory Claeys: The "Survival of the Fittest" and the Origins of Social Darwinism, in Journal of the History of Ideas, Vol. 61, No. 2, 2002, p. 223–240
    98. Cormac Ó Gráda: Famine. A Short History, Princeton University Press 2009, ISBN 978-0-691-12237-3 (pp. 20, 203–206)
    99. Carr-Saunders, A. M. (1927). "The Population Conference at Geneva". The Economic Journal. 37 (148): 670–672. doi:10.2307/2223628. ISSN 0013-0133. JSTOR 2223628.
    100. C. -S., A. M. (1 October 1927). "The World Population Conference". Nature. 120 (3022): 465–466. Bibcode:1927Natur.120..465C. doi:10.1038/120465a0. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 1567312. S2CID 4138206.
    101. Connelly, Matthew (November 2006). "To inherit the Earth. Imagining world population, from the yellow peril to the population bomb". Journal of Global History. 1 (3): 299–319. doi:10.1017/S1740022806003019. ISSN 1740-0236. S2CID 154909241.
    102. "The Unrealized Horrors of Population Explosion – The New York Times". archive.is. 8 January 2020. Archived from the original on 8 January 2020. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
    103. Webb, Richard. "The population debate: Are there too many people on the planet?". New Scientist. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 21 October 2021. Alt URL
    104. "United Nations Population Division | Department of Economic and Social Affairs". www.un.org. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
    105. Leaders from the 1960s: A Biographical Sourcebook of American Activism. Greenwood Press, 1994. 1994. p. 318. ISBN 9780313274145.
    106. Wilson, E.O. (2002). The Future of Life. pp. xxiii, 39, 43, 76. Vintage ISBN 0-679-76811-4
    107. Ron Nielsen, The Little Green Handbook: Seven Trends Shaping the Future of Our Planet, Picador, New York (2006) ISBN 978-0-312-42581-4
    108. Pentti Linkola, "Can Life Prevail?", Arktos Media, 2nd Revised ed. 2011. pp. 120–121. ISBN 1907166637
    109. Gao, George (8 June 2015). "Scientists more worried than public about world's growing population". Pew Research Center. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
    110. Moody, Oliver (31 August 2017). "Overpopulation is the biggest threat to mankind, Nobel laureates say". The Times. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
    111. McKie, Robin (25 January 2017). "Biologists think 50% of species will be facing extinction by the end of the century". The Observer.
    112. Carrington, Damian (5 November 2019). "Climate crisis: 11,000 scientists warn of 'untold suffering'". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
    113. "David Attenborough's claim that humans have overrun the planet is his most popular comment". www.newstatesman.com. 4 November 2020. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
    114. Morales, Alex (24 October 2006). "Canada". Bloomberg. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    115. "WWF – Living Planet Report 2006". Panda.org. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    116. "WWF Living planet report". Panda.org. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    117. "Data and Methodology". footprintnetwork.org. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
    118. Carrington, Damian (30 September 2014). "Earth has lost half of its wildlife in the past 40 years, says WWF". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
    119. Martin, Roger (2010). "Stopping at two children is better for the planet". BBC HARDtalk. Interviewed by Carrie Gracie
    120. "Publications – Global Footprint Network". Retrieved 17 September 2017.
    121. Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh; Harmen Verbruggen (1999). "Spatial sustainability, trade and indicators: an evaluation of the 'ecological footprint'" (PDF). Ecological Economics. 29 (1): 61–72. doi:10.1016/S0921-8009(99)00032-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 October 2007.
    122. "Planning and Markets: Peter Gordon and Harry W. Richardson". Pam.usc.edu. Archived from the original on 27 June 2010. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    123. Cohen, J.E. (1995). How many people can the earth support? W.W. Norton & Company, New York, NY, USA.
    124. Van Den Bergh, Jeroen C. J. M.; Rietveld, Piet (2004). "Reconsidering the Limits to World Population: Meta-analysis and Meta-prediction". BioScience. 54 (3): 195. doi:10.1641/0006-3568(2004)054[0195:RTLTWP]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0006-3568.
    125. One Planet, How Many People? A Review of Earth's Carrying Capacity United Nations, June 2012
    126. Carrington, Damian (22 March 2018). "Paul Ehrlich: 'Collapse of civilisation is a near certainty within decades'". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
    127. A PLANET OF 3 BILLION | Kirkus Reviews.
    128. Sasser, Jade (13 November 2018). On infertile ground : population control and women's rights in the era of climate change. New York. ISBN 978-1-4798-7343-2. OCLC 1029075188.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
    129. "The short history of global living conditions and why it matters that we know it". Our World in Data. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
    130. "Ecological Debt Day". Archived from the original on December 17, 2008. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
    131. "Planetary Boundaries: Specials". Nature. 23 September 2009. Archived from the original on 12 February 2013. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
    132. Bologna, M.; Aquino, G. (2020). "Deforestation and world population sustainability: a quantitative analysis". Scientific Reports. 10 (7631): 7631. arXiv:2006.12202. Bibcode:2020NatSR..10.7631B. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-63657-6. PMC 7203172. PMID 32376879. Calculations show that, maintaining the actual rate of population growth and resource consumption, in particular forest consumption, we have a few decades left before an irreversible collapse of our civilisation.
    133. Bradshaw, Corey J. A.; Ehrlich, Paul R.; Beattie, Andrew; Ceballos, Gerardo; Crist, Eileen; Diamond, Joan; Dirzo, Rodolfo; Ehrlich, Anne H.; Harte, John; Harte, Mary Ellen; Pyke, Graham; Raven, Peter H.; Ripple, William J.; Saltré, Frédérik; Turnbull, Christine; Wackernagel, Mathis; Blumstein, Daniel T. (2021). "Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future". Frontiers in Conservation Science. 1. doi:10.3389/fcosc.2020.615419. S2CID 231589034. Large populations and their continued growth are also drivers of soil degradation and biodiversity loss. More people means that more synthetic compounds and dangerous throw-away plastics are manufactured, many of which add to the growing toxification of the Earth.
    134. "IAP (login required)". InterAcademies.net. Archived from the original on 10 February 2010. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
    135. "Overpopulation's Real Victim Will Be the Environment". Time. 26 October 2011. Archived from the original on 18 February 2013. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
    136. Subramanian, Meera (2019). "Anthropocene now: influential panel votes to recognize Earth's new epoch". Nature News. Retrieved 1 March 2020. Twenty-nine members of the AWG supported the Anthropocene designation and voted in favour of starting the new epoch in the mid-twentieth century, when a rapidly rising human population accelerated the pace of industrial production, the use of agricultural chemicals and other human activities.
    137. Syvitski, Jaia; Waters, Colin N.; Day, John; et al. (2020). "Extraordinary human energy consumption and resultant geological impacts beginning around 1950 CE initiated the proposed Anthropocene Epoch". Communications Earth & Environment. 1 (32): 32. Bibcode:2020ComEE...1...32S. doi:10.1038/s43247-020-00029-y. S2CID 222415797. Human population has exceeded historical natural limits, with 1) the development of new energy sources, 2) technological developments in aid of productivity, education and health, and 3) an unchallenged position on top of food webs. Humans remain Earth's only species to employ technology so as to change the sources, uses, and distribution of energy forms, including the release of geologically trapped energy (i.e. coal, petroleum, uranium). In total, humans have altered nature at the planetary scale, given modern levels of human-contributed aerosols and gases, the global distribution of radionuclides, organic pollutants and mercury, and ecosystem disturbances of terrestrial and marine environments. Approximately 17,000 monitored populations of 4005 vertebrate species have suffered a 60% decline between 1970 and 2014, and ~1 million species face extinction, many within decades. Humans' extensive 'technosphere', now reaches ~30 Tt, including waste products from non-renewable resources.
    138. Carrington, Damian (21 May 2018). "Humans just 0.01% of all life but have destroyed 83% of wild mammals – study". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
    139. Baillie, Jonathan; Zhang, Ya-Ping (2018). "Space for nature". Science. 361 (6407): 1051. Bibcode:2018Sci...361.1051B. doi:10.1126/science.aau1397. PMID 30213888.
    140. John T. Houghton (2004)."Global warming: the complete briefing Archived 3 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine". Cambridge University Press. p.326. ISBN 0-521-52874-7
    141. "Once taboo, population enters climate debate". The Independent. 5 December 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
    142. Agencies (6 January 2006). "Population control 'vital' to curbing climate change". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
    143. Wolf, C.; Ripple, W.J.; Crist, E. (2021). "Human population, social justice, and climate policy" (PDF). Sustainability Science. 16 (5): 1753–1756. doi:10.1007/s11625-021-00951-w. S2CID 233404010.
    144. Laubichler, Manfred (3 November 2022). "8 billion humans: How population growth and climate change are connected as the 'Anthropocene engine' transforms the planet". The Conversation. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
    145. [29][140][141][142][143][144]
    146. Stone, Lyman (12 December 2017). "Why you shouldn't obsess about "overpopulation"". Vox. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
    147. Best, Steven (2014). The Politics of Total Liberation: Revolution for the 21st Century. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 160. doi:10.1057/9781137440723. ISBN 978-1137471116. By 2050 the human population will top 9 billion, and world meat consumption will likely double.
    148. Devlin, Hannah (19 July 2018). "Rising global meat consumption 'will devastate environment'". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 September 2019.
    149. Godfray, H. Charles J.; Aveyard, Paul; et al. (2018). "Meat consumption, health, and the environment". Science. 361 (6399). Bibcode:2018Sci...361M5324G. doi:10.1126/science.aam5324. PMID 30026199. S2CID 49895246.
    150. Perkins, Sid (11 July 2017). "The best way to reduce your carbon footprint is one the government isn't telling you about". Science. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
    151. "UN World Population Report 2001" (PDF). p. 31. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 April 2003. Retrieved 16 December 2008.
    152. Pimm, S. L.; Jenkins, C. N.; Abell, R.; Brooks, T. M.; Gittleman, J. L.; Joppa, L. N.; Raven, P. H.; Roberts, C. M.; Sexton, J. O. (30 May 2014). "The biodiversity of species and their rates of extinction, distribution, and protection". Science. 344 (6187). doi:10.1126/science.1246752. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 24876501. S2CID 206552746. The overarching driver of species extinction is human population growth and increasing per capita consumption.
    153. Ceballos, Gerardo; Ehrlich, Paul R.; Barnosky, Anthony D.; García, Andrés; Pringle, Robert M.; Palmer, Todd M. (2015). "Accelerated modern human–induced species losses: Entering the sixth mass extinction". Science Advances. 1 (5): e1400253. Bibcode:2015SciA....1E0253C. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1400253. PMC 4640606. PMID 26601195. All of these are related to human population size and growth, which increases consumption (especially among the rich), and economic inequity.
    154. Crist, Eileen; Cafaro, Philip, eds. (2012). Life on the Brink: Environmentalists Confront Overpopulation. University of Georgia Press. p. 83. ISBN 978-0820343853.
    155. Watts, Jonathan (6 May 2019). "Human society under urgent threat from loss of Earth's natural life". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 18 May 2019. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
    156. Stokstad, Erik (5 May 2019). "Landmark analysis documents the alarming global decline of nature". Science. AAAS. Retrieved 11 August 2020. Driving these threats are the growing human population, which has doubled since 1970 to 7.6 billion, and consumption. (Per capita of use of materials is up 15% over the past 5 decades.)
    157. Uniyal, Shivani; Paliwal, Rashmi; Kaphaliya, Bhumija; R.K., Sharma (2017). "1". Environmental issues surrounding human overpopulation. Information Science Reference. doi:10.4018/978-1-5225-1683-5.ch001. ISBN 978-1-5225-1684-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 January 2022. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
    158. "The Worst Mistake of the Human Race" (PDF). Jared Diamond, UCLA School of Medicine.
    159. Alberro, Heather (28 January 2020). "Why we should be wary of blaming 'overpopulation' for the climate crisis". The Conversation. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
    160. "David Attenborough warns 'human beings have overrun the world' in new film". inews.co.uk. 15 January 2020. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
    161. Greenfield, Patrick (6 December 2022). "'We are at war with nature': UN environment chief warns of biodiversity apocalypse". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
    162. Lin, Doris (3 July 2019). "Human Overpopulation". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 20 October 2021. Human overpopulation is an animal rights issue as well as an environmental issue and a human rights issue. Human activities, including mining, transportation, pollution, agriculture, development, and logging, take habitat away from wild animals as well as kill animals directly.
    163. "Another Inconvenient Truth: The World's Growing Population Poses a Malthusian Dilemma Archived 25 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine". Scientific American (2 October 2009).
    164. David Pimentel, et al. "Will Limits of the Earth's Resources Control Human Numbers?" Archived 10 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Dieoff.org
    165. Lester R. Brown, Gary Gardner, Brian Halweil (September 1998). Worldwatch Paper #143: Beyond Malthus: Sixteen Dimensions of the Population Problem Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Worldwatch Institute, ISBN 1-878071-45-9
    166. "Food: The growing problem". Nature. 466 (7306): 546–547. 1 July 2010. doi:10.1038/466546a. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 20671687. S2CID 205057552.
    167. Young, A. (1999). "Is there Really Spare Land? A Critique of Estimates of Available Cultivable Land in Developing Countries". Environment, Development and Sustainability. 1: 3–18. doi:10.1023/A:1010055012699. S2CID 153970029.
    168. "Overpopulation: The Making of a Myth". Retrieved 13 February 2010.
    169. Brown, Lester R. and Halweil, Brian (23 September 1999). Population Outrunning Water Supply as World Hits 6 Billion. Worldwatch Institute.
    170. Fred Pearce (2007). When the Rivers Run Dry: Water—The Defining Crisis of the Twenty-first Century. Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-8573-8.
    171. Worldwatch, The (27 April 2012). Outgrowing the Earth: The Food Security Challenge in an Age of Falling Water Tables and Rising Temperatures: Books: Lester R. Brown. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0393060706.
    172. Butler, Colin David (5 March 1994). "Overpopulation, overconsumption, and economics". The Lancet. 343 (8897): 582–584. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(94)91526-1. PMID 7906334. S2CID 30246584. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
    173. Huxley, Aldous. "Brave New World Revisited: overpopulation". Retrieved 9 July 2014. (A non-fiction book, with the entire book focused on the effects of human overpopulation on human affairs including both societal and individual concerns.)
    174. Bartlett, Albert A. (2000). "Democracy Cannot Survive Overpopulation". Population and Environment. 22 (1): 63–71. doi:10.1023/A:1006681515521. S2CID 154695448.
    175. Harte, John (2007). "Human population as a dynamic factor in environmental degradation". Population and Environment. 28 (4–5): 223–236. doi:10.1007/s11111-007-0048-3. S2CID 18611090.
    176. Acemoglu, Daron; Fergusson, Leopoldo; Johnson, Simon (2017). "Population and Civil War". National Bureau of Economic Research. Working Paper Series. doi:10.3386/w23322. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
    177. Hickel, Jason (2021). Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World. Windmill Books. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-1786091215. And of course capitalism itself creates pressures for population growth: more people means more labour, cheaper labour, and more consumers. These pressures filter into our culture, and even into national policy: countries like France and Japan are offering incentives to get women to have more children, to keep their economies growing.
    178. Sullivan, Dylan; Hickel, Jason (2023). "Capitalism and extreme poverty: A global analysis of real wages, human height, and mortality since the long 16th century". World Development. 161: 106026. doi:10.1016/j.worlddev.2022.106026.
    179. Hickel, Jason (2021). Less is More: How Degrowth will Save the World. London. ISBN 978-1-78609-121-5. OCLC 1154101160.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
    180. Spernovasilis, N.; Markaki, I.; Papadakis, M.; Tsioutis, C.; Markaki, L. (19 December 2021). "Epidemics and pandemics: Is human overpopulation the elephant in the room?". Ethics, Medicine, and Public Health. 19: 100728. doi:10.1016/j.jemep.2021.100728. ISSN 2352-5525. PMC 8530531. PMID 34703871.
    181. Spernovasilis N, Markaki I, Papadakis M, Tsioutis C, Markaki L (19 December 2021). "Epidemics and pandemics: Is human overpopulation the elephant in the room?". Ethics Med Public Health. 19: 100728. doi:10.1016/j.jemep.2021.100728. PMC 8530531. PMID 34703871.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    182. "Flannery calls for population inquiry". www.abc.net.au. 19 November 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
    183. Ehrlich, Paul R; Ehrlich, Anne H (2004), One with Nineveh: Politics, Consumption, and the Human Future, Island Press/Shearwater Books, pp. 181–205 (chapter 6)
    184. Ehrlich, Paul R.; Ehrlich, Anne H.; Daily, Gretchen C. (1995), The Stork and the Plow: The Equity Answer to the Human Dilemma, Grosset/Putnam Books
    185. Greguš, Jan; Guillebaud, John (11 September 2023). "Scientists' Warning: Remove the Barriers to Contraception Access, for Health of Women and the Planet". World. 4 (3): 589–597. doi:10.3390/world4030036. ISSN 2673-4060.
    186. Lifeblood: How to Change the World One Dead Mosquito at a Time, Alex Perry p9
    187. Ryerson, William N. (2010). The Post Carbon Reader: Managing the 21st Century's Sustainability Crises, "Ch.12: Population: The Multiplier of Everything Else". Healdsburg, Calif.: Watershed Media. pp. 153–174. ISBN 978-0970950062.
    188. Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Arts, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic; Greguš, Jan (21 June 2023). "Sustainability, population and reproductive ethics". Česká gynekologie. 88 (3): 190–199. doi:10.48095/cccg2023190. PMID 37344185. S2CID 259222327.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    189. Schnabel, Landon (16 July 2021). "Secularism and Fertility Worldwide". Socius. 7: 1–18. doi:10.1177/23780231211031320. S2CID 237720715. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
    190. Engelman, R., 2012. Trusting women to end population growth. In: Cafaro, P., Crist, E. (Eds.), Life on the Brink: Environmentalists Confront Overpopulation. The University of Georgia Press, Athens and London, pp. 223–239.
    191. Engelman, R., 2016. Nine population strategies to stop short of 9 billion. In: Washington, H., Twomey, P. (Eds.), A Future beyond Growth: Toward a Steady State Economy. Routledge, London, pp. 32–42.
    192. Crist, Eileen (2019). Abundant Earth. University of Chicago Press. doi:10.7208/chicago/9780226596945.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-226-59680-8. S2CID 134956670.
    193. McGrath, Matt (27 October 2014). "Population controls 'will not solve environment issues'". BBC. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
    194. Bradshaw, Corey J. A.; Brook, Barry W. (2014). "Human population reduction is not a quick fix for environmental problems". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 111 (46): 16610–16615. Bibcode:2014PNAS..11116610B. doi:10.1073/pnas.1410465111. PMC 4246304. PMID 25349398.
    195. "1992 World Scientists' Warning to Humanity | Union of Concerned Scientists". www.ucsusa.org.
    196. Ripple, William J.; Wolf, Christopher; Newsome, Thomas M.; Galetti, Mauro; Alamgir, Mohammed; Crist, Eileen; Mahmoud, Mahmoud I.; Laurance, William F. (13 November 2017). "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice". BioScience. 67 (12): 1026–1028. doi:10.1093/biosci/bix125. hdl:11336/71342. ISSN 0006-3568.
    197. Ripple, William J; Wolf, Christopher; Galetti, Mauro; Newsome, Thomas M; Green, Tom L; Alamgir, Mohammed; Crist, Eileen; Mahmoud, Mahmoud I; Laurance, William F (7 March 2018). "The Role of Scientists' Warning in Shifting Policy from Growth to Conservation Economy". BioScience. 68 (4): 239–240. doi:10.1093/biosci/biy009. hdl:11449/166092. ISSN 0006-3568.
    198. Ripple, William J.; Wolf, Christopher; Newsome, Thomas M.; Galetti, Mauro; Alamgir, Mohammed; Crist, Eileen; Mahmoud, Mahmoud I.; Laurance, William F. (13 November 2017). "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice". BioScience. 67 (12): 1026. doi:10.1093/biosci/bix125. hdl:11336/71342. ISSN 0006-3568.
    199. Ripple, William J.; Wolf, Christopher; Newsome, Thomas M.; Galetti, Mauro; Alamgir, Mohammed; Crist, Eileen; Mahmoud, Mahmoud I.; Laurance, William F. (13 November 2017). "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice". BioScience. 67 (12): 1028. doi:10.1093/biosci/bix125. hdl:11336/71342. ISSN 0006-3568.
    200. Ripple, William J; Wolf, Christopher; Newsome, Thomas M; Barnard, Phoebe; Moomaw, William R (2020). "World Scientists' Warning of a Climate Emergency". BioScience. 70 (1): 10. doi:10.1093/biosci/biz088. hdl:2445/151800. ISSN 0006-3568.
    201. Ripple, William J; Wolf, Christopher; Newsome, Thomas M; Barnard, Phoebe; Moomaw, William R (2020). "World Scientists' Warning of a Climate Emergency". BioScience. 70 (1): 11. doi:10.1093/biosci/biz088. hdl:2445/151800. ISSN 0006-3568.
    202. Ripple, William J; Wolf, Christopher; Newsome, Thomas M; Gregg, Jillian W; Lenton, Timothy M; Palomo, Ignacio; Eikelboom, Jasper A J; Law, Beverly E; Huq, Saleemul; Duffy, Philip B; Rockström, Johan (28 July 2021). "World Scientists' Warning of a Climate Emergency 2021". BioScience. 71 (9): 894–898. doi:10.1093/biosci/biab079. hdl:10871/126814. ISSN 0006-3568.
    203. "Thanks to education, global fertility could fall faster than expected". The Economist. 2 February 2019. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
    204. "Population growth driving climate change, poverty: experts Archived 23 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine". Agence France-Presse (21 September 2009).
    205. "Netherlands Again Number One Donor to United Nations Population Fund". United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
    206. "Maternal mortality ratio falling too slowly to meet goal Archived 31 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine". WHO (12 October 2007).
    207. Fornos, Werner (10 December 2001). "Q: should the United Nations support more family-planning services for poor countries?". Insight on the News.
    208. Hickel, Jason (2021). Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World. Windmill Books. p. 111. ISBN 978-1786091215.
    209. Vajk, J.Peter (1 January 1976). "The impact of space colonization on world dynamics". Technological Forecasting and Social Change. 9 (4): 361–99. doi:10.1016/0040-1625(76)90019-6. ISSN 0040-1625.
    210. O'Neill, Colonies in Space; Pournelle, A Step Farther Out.
    211. "Stephen Hawking: mankind must move to outer space within a century - Telegraph". 17 August 2014. Archived from the original on 17 August 2014. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
    212. G. K. O'Neill. The High Frontier: Human Colonies in Space. Morrow, 1977.
    213. Greetings, Carbon-Based Bipeds! (1999) Arthur C. Clarke, Voyager ISBN 0-00-224698-8
    214. The Good Earth Is Dying (1971) Isaac Asimov (published in Der Spiegel)
    215. Mining the Sky (1996) John S. Lewis. Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-201-47959-1
    216. "UN Habitat calling urban living 'a good thing". BBC News. 27 June 2007. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    217. "National Geographic Magazine; Special report 2008: Changing Climate (Village Green-article by Michelle Nijhuis)". Michellenijhuis.com. 29 September 2011. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    218. "UN Habitat calling to rethink urban planning". Unhabitat.org. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    219. Ehrlich, Population Bomb 1968 p.152-p.53
    220. "David Suzuki fires off from the 'death zone' at Trudeau, Weaver and a broken system". National Observer. 5 March 2018.
    221. "Figure 8: Population by Total Fertility (millions)" in World Population Prospects, the 2010 Revision. United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2011)
    222. Dyett, Jordan; Thomas, Cassidy (18 January 2019). "Overpopulation Discourse: Patriarchy, Racism, and the Specter of Ecofascism". Perspectives on Global Development and Technology. 18 (1–2): 205–224. doi:10.1163/15691497-12341514. ISSN 1569-1500. S2CID 159217740.
    223. Hartmann, Betsy (2016) [1987]. Reproductive Rights and Wrongs: The Global Politics of Population Control (3rd ed.). Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books. p. 26. ISBN 978-1608467334.
    224. "Dominic Lawson: The population timebomb is a myth The doom-sayers are becoming more fashionable just as experts are coming to the view it has all been one giant false alarm". The Independent. UK. 18 January 2011. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
    225. Peron, Jim (October 1995). "Exploding Population Myths" (PDF). frasterinstitute.org. South Africa: The Fraser Institute. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 October 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
    226. A Reverse ‘Handmaid's Tale’ Is Just as Horrifying — Get the Facts Straight on Population Growth cato.org, Chelsea Follett, April 24, 2018.
    227. Vollset, Stein Emil; Goren, Emily; Yuan, Chun-Wei; Cao, Jackie; Smith, Amanda E.; Hsiao, Thomas; Bisignano, Catherine; Azhar, Gulrez S.; Castro, Emma; Chalek, Julian; Dolgert, Andrew J. (17 October 2020). "Fertility, mortality, migration, and population scenarios for 195 countries and territories from 2017 to 2100: a forecasting analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study". The Lancet. 396 (10258): 1285–1306. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30677-2. ISSN 0140-6736. PMC 7561721. PMID 32679112.
    228. "The best news of 2020? Humanity may never hit the 10 billion mark". Mongabay Environmental News. 10 September 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
    229. "The forgotten roots of India's mass sterilization program – The Washi…". archive.is. 17 May 2020. Archived from the original on 17 May 2020. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
    230. Follett, Chelsea (21 July 2020). "Neo‐Malthusianism and Coercive Population Control in China and India: Overpopulation Concerns Often Result in Coercion". CATO Institute. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
    231. UNFPA (1994). Programme of Action: Adopted at the International Conference of Population and development, Cairo, 5–13 September 1994. UN Population Fund. pp. Section 7.3. ISBN 0-89714-696-4.
    232. Meijers, Tim (2016), "Climate change and the right to one child", Human Rights and Sustainability, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge: Routledge, pp. 181–194, doi:10.4324/9781315665320-14, ISBN 9781315665320
    233. Conly, Sarah (2016). One child : do we have a right to more?. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-020343-6. OCLC 969537327.
    234. Hedberg T (2021) The moral imperative to reduce global population. The Ecological Citizen 5(1): 47–54.
    235. "Birth rates 'must be curbed to win war on global poverty'". The Independent. London. 31 January 2007. Archived from the original on 19 January 2008. Retrieved 20 May 2010.
    236. Green, Hannah Harris (6 October 2018). "The legacy of India's quest to sterilise millions of men". Quartz. G/O Media. Archived from the original on 16 October 2022. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
    237. Vinay Lal. Indira Gandhi Archived 29 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine, UCLA College of Letters and Science
    238. "'Cars for sterilisation' campaign". 1 July 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 via bbc.com.
    239. "Uttar Pradesh bill: The myth of India's population explosion". BBC News. 13 July 2021. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
    240. Thomas, Cassidy; Gosink, Elhom (25 March 2021). "At the Intersection of Eco-Crises, Eco-Anxiety, and Political Turbulence: A Primer on Twenty-First Century Ecofascism". Perspectives on Global Development and Technology. 20 (1–2): 30–54. doi:10.1163/15691497-12341581. ISSN 1569-1500. S2CID 233663634.
    241. Kashwan, Prakash (13 September 2020). "How American Environmentalism's Racist Roots Shaped Our Thoughts on Conservation". The Wire Science. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
    242. "Is the way we think about overpopulation racist? | Fred Pearce". The Guardian. 19 March 2018. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
    243. "'Eco-fascist' Arm of Neo-Nazi Terror Group, The Base, Linked to Swedish Arson". Vice News. 29 January 2020. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
    244. Haraway, Donna Jeanne (2016). Staying with the trouble : making kin in the Chthulucene. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-6224-1. OCLC 1027121011.
    245. Daly, H. E.; Farley, J (2011). Ecological economics: principles and applications (2nd ed.). Island press.
    246. Kuhlemann, K. (2018). Any size population will do?’: The fallacy of aiming for stabilization of human numbers. The Ecological Citizen, 1(2), 181-189.
    247. Varagur, Krithika (14 November 2017). "The Muslim Overpopulation Myth That Just Won't Die". The Atlantic. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
    248. "Mathis Wackernagel Population Voice". Earth Overshoot Day. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
    249. "Population Research Institute Inc - Company Profile and News". Bloomberg News.
    Bundled references

    Further reading

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.