Deck 15: Population and Urbanization

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Question
In any given population, fertility will always be higher than fecundity.
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Question
At birth, the U.S. sex ratio is generally even at 100, indicating that an equal number of males and females is born.
Question
Farming and agricultural-related work continues to be the dominant way of life in rural areas of the United States.
Question
The majority of new urban growth comes from natural increases in population due to high birth rates and lower death rates.
Question
Cities undergo economic recovery more quickly than do entire nations.
Question
How large is the world's population today?​

A) ​6 billion
B) ​6.5 billion
C) ​7.2 billion
D) ​8 billion
Question
From a symbolic interactionist perspective, the city is a faceless and alienating place.
Question
Today just a few hundred financial institutions and developers finance and construct most major and minor urban development projects around the country.
Question
Demographers who have revised the model of the demographic transition have highlighted the interactive effects of what are actually multiple types of transitions taking place simultaneously.
Question
Capitalism and innovative technologies are successfully solving the problems of overpopulation.
Question
The conflict perspective on the growth of cities is completely structural in its approach and explanations, focusing on the impact of capitalism.
Question
Immigration to the United States has declined in recent years due to job loss and a period of economic crisis.
Question
White women have a longer life expectancy than white men; however, African American men have a longer life expectancy than African American women.
Question
Neo-Malthusians argue that improving the status of women, reducing religious intolerance, and ending racial discrimination are essential to solving the problem of overpopulation and rapid population growth.
Question
There is a lack of consensus among scholars about the consequences of global population growth.
Question
Hispanics accounted for about half the population growth in suburban areas in the 2000s.
Question
In most areas of the world today, women are having fewer children than they have in the past.
Question
Immigration is the only significant factor affecting population size and growth.
Question
The demographic transition is an accurate model for describing the process of population growth in all societies.
Question
In low-income, less-developed nations, infectious diseases remain the leading cause of death.
Question
The term fecundity refers to_______________________.

A) ​the number of women between ages 15 and 45 in a population
B) ​the average number of children the women in a population have
C) ​the immigrant population in a given year, plus their new offspring
D) ​the potential number of children born to women who reproduced at biological capacity
Question
__________ countries are those in which women are not having enough children to ensure that on average a daughter will survive to childbearing age.

A) ​Low-fertility
B) ​Intermediate-fertility
C) ​Medium-fertility
D) ​High-fertility
Question
Which of these is a social factor affecting fertility level?​

A) ​number of women ages 15 to 45
B) ​availability of affordable contraception
C) ​attitudes about ideal family size
D) ​infant mortality
Question
The United Nations defines high-, intermediate-, and low-fertility countries according to __________.

A) ​the total fecundity of the population
B) ​the total fertility of the average woman in the population
C) ​the average number of daughters who will live to childbearing age born to each woman
D) ​the level of fecundity minus total fertility
Question
According to the categories defined by the United Nations, the United States is a __________ country.

A) ​low-fertility
B) ​intermediate-fertility
C) ​medium-fertility
D) ​high-fertility
Question
Which of these characteristics is common to the women throughout the world who are having the most children?​

A) ​They live exclusively in poorer countries.
B) ​They live in urban areas and have little access to birth control.
C) ​They live in agricultural regions where infant mortality is high.
D) ​They tend to come from intermediate-level fertility countries.
Question
The primary cause of world population growth in recent years has been __________.

A) ​a decline in mortality
B) ​increased fertility with better nutrition
C) ​more multiple births globally
D) ​increasing immigration
Question
__________ refers to the actual level of childbearing for an individual or a population.

A) ​Reproduction
B) ​Fecundity
C) ​Fertility
D) ​Fruitfulness
Question
__________ is a subfield of sociology that examines population size, composition, and distribution.

A) ​Ecology
B) ​Demography
C) ​Social psychology
D) ​Graphology
Question
The simplest measure of mortality is the __________ rate.

A) ​crude death
B) ​total death
C) ​death quota
D) ​refined death
Question
Eighteen percent of the world's population lives in __________ countries.

A) ​ow-fertility
B) ​intermediate-fertility
C) ​medium-fertility
D) ​high-fertility
Question
In 2013, the crude birth rate in the United States was almost __________, compared with an all-time high rate of 27.0 per 1,000 in 1947 (following World War II).

A) ​5 per 1,000
B) ​10 per 1,000
C) ​12 per 1,000
D) ​18 per 1,000
Question
Demographers use the term __________ for a group of people who live in a specified geographic area and who are under study.

A) ​society
B) ​culture
C) ​country
D) ​population
Question
The __________ is measured as the number of deaths per 1,000 people in a population in a given year.

A) ​total death rate
B) ​crude death rate
C) ​death quota rate
D) ​refined death rate
Question
The __________ is the number of live births per 1,000 people in a population in a given year.

A) ​total fertility rate
B) ​crude birth rate
C) ​age-specific rate
D) ​nonrefined fertility
Question
In 1900, the leading cause of death in the United States was __________.

A) ​kidney disease
B) ​influenza/pneumonia
C) ​accidents
D) ​heart disease
Question
__________ is the potential number of children that could be born if every woman reproduced at her maximum biological capacity.

A) ​Reproduction
B) ​Fecundity
C) ​Fertility
D) ​Fruitfulness
Question
In low-income countries, the leading cause of death is __________.

A) ​heart disease
B) ​accidents
C) ​infectious disease
D) ​stroke
Question
The primary biological factor determining fertility within a particular society is __________.

A) ​number of women ages 15 to 45
B) ​availability of affordable contraception
C) ​governmental policy and regulations
D) ​infant mortality
Question
The level of fertility in a society is based on biological and social factors, the primary biological factor being __________.

A) ​the general health and nutrition of women
B) ​the roles available to women in a society
C) ​the prevalent viewpoint regarding what constitutes the "ideal" family size
D) ​the number of women of childbearing age
Question
__________ is an estimate of the average lifetime in years of people born in a specific year.

A) ​Life expectancy
B) ​Longevity determination
C) ​Life prospects
D) ​Life projection
Question
One measure of population composition is the __________, which is the number of males for every hundred females in a given population.

A) ​sex ratio
B) ​rate of gender composition
C) ​demographic transition
D) ​gender gap
Question
The African slave trade to the Americas is the most striking example of __________.

A) ​external migration
B) ​involuntary migration
C) ​internal migration
D) ​voluntary migration
Question
In 2012, the U.S. infant mortality rate for African American infants was __________ per 1,000 live births.

A) ​7.2
B) ​12.4
C) ​13.8
D) ​19.8
Question
Over the past several decades, many people have moved from low-income countries to high-income countries throughout the world. This is an example of __________.

A) ​international migration
B) ​emigration
C) ​internal migration
D) ​cross-national migration
Question
The __________ refers to the number of deaths of infants under 1 year of age per 1,000 live births in a given year.

A) ​underage mortality rate
B) ​infant mortality rate
C) ​child death index
D) ​infant death quotient
Question
The __________ is considered an important reflection of a society's level of preventive medical care, maternal nutrition, childbirth procedures, and neonatal care for infants.

A) ​crude death rate
B) ​fecundity minus actual fertility rate
C) ​infant mortality rate
D) ​life expectancy
Question
In urbanized areas, __________ may be measured by the number of people who live per room, per block, or per square mile.

A) ​density
B) ​migration
C) ​distribution
D) ​emigration
Question
Life expectancy varies by sex. Females born in the United States in 2014 could expect to live about __________ years, compared with a life expectancy of __________ for males.

A) ​68; 72
B) ​78; 75
C) ​81 ; 77
D) ​76; 81
Question
In 2010, the leading cause of death in the United States was __________.

A) ​cancer
B) ​chronic lung disease
C) ​diabetes
D) ​heart disease
Question
People migrate either voluntarily or involuntarily. Which of these is considered a "push" factor for international migration?

A) ​a natural disaster
B) ​a democratic government
C) ​religious freedom
D) ​employment opportunities
Question
__________ refers to the physical location of people throughout a geographic area; __________ is the term for the number of people within a given geographic area.

A) ​Migration; distribution
B) ​Distribution; density
C) ​Density; distribution
D) ​Immigration; distribution
Question
__________ is the movement of people from one geographic area to another for the purpose of changing residency. It affects the size and distribution of the population in a given area.

A) ​Immigration
B) ​Distribution
C) ​Migration
D) ​Emigration
Question
Which of these is considered a "pull" factor for international migration?

A) ​a natural disaster
B) ​war
C) ​religious freedom
D) ​harsh weather conditions
Question
__________ is the movement of people into a geographic area to take up residency; __________ is the movement of people out of a geographic area to take up residency elsewhere.

A) ​Distribution; migration
B) ​Migration; redistribution
C) ​Immigration; emigration
D) ​Emigration; immigration
Question
__________ is the number of people living in a specific geographic area.

A) ​Distribution
B) ​Migration
C) ​Emigration
D) ​Density
Question
Globally, the country with the lowest rate of infant mortality is __________.

A) ​the United States
B) ​Japan
C) ​Sweden
D) ​Hong Kong
Question
In 2012, the U.S. infant mortality rate for white infants was __________ per 1,000 live births.

A) ​3.0
B) ​5.3
C) ​7.3
D) ​9.4
Question
For persons born in the United States in 2014, life expectancy at birth was about __________.

A) ​70 years
B) ​74 years
C) ​79 years
D) ​82 years
Question
In the United States, after the Civil War, thousands of African Americans moved from the South to the North. This is an example of __________ .

A) ​international migration
B) ​emigration
C) ​internal migration
D) ​cross-national migration
Question
English economist __________, one of the first scholars to systematically study the effects of population, argued that "the power of population is infinitely greater than the power of the earth to produce subsistence (food) for man."

A) ​Emile Durkheim
B) ​Max Weber
C) ​Karl Marx
D) ​Thomas Malthus
Question
The __________ distribution of a population has a direct bearing on the demand for schooling, health, employment, housing, and pensions.

A) ​sex
B) ​age
C) ​race
D) ​income
Question
The enduring significant contribution of Marx and Engels to the study of demography is the suggestion that___________________________.

A) ​poverty, more than overpopulation, is the central issue relating to food supply in a capitalist country
B) ​the population grows exponentially while the food supply growths arithmetically, creating overpopulation
C) ​population would eventually be checked by natural and human-caused disasters
D) ​advanced technology should be used to produce food, not profits
Question
A conflict perspective on migration, the __________ suggests that immigrants from lowincome countries are often recruited for secondary-labor-market positions in other countries. Workers from high-income countries are recruited for primary sector employment.

A) ​network theory
B) ​institutional theory
C) ​world systems theory
D) ​split-labor-market theory
Question
English economist Thomas Malthus argued that the population would increase in a geometric (exponential) progression whereas the food supply would increase only by an arithmetic progression; thus, a __________ occurs.

A) ​doubling effect
B) ​negative check
C) ​preventive check
D) ​limit to growth
Question
During the demographic transition stage of ____________, little population growth occurs because high birth rates are offset by high death rates.

A) ​postindustrialization
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
Question
A population pyramid that is actually pyramidal in shape is likely to pertain to __________.

A) ​a high-income country
B) ​a low-fertility country
C) ​a high-fertility country
D) ​an intermediate-fertility country
Question
During the demographic transition stage of __________, birth rates continue to decline as more women gain full-time employment and the cost of raising children continues to increase. The population grows very slowly, if at all, because the decrease in birth rates is coupled with a stable death rate.

A) ​postindustrialization
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
Question
During the demographic transition stage of __________, very little population growth occurs because both birth rates and death rates are low.

A) ​agriculturalism
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
Question
In the United States, the estimated sex ratio for 2013 was __________​

A) ​75.4
B) ​82.3
C) ​88.6
D) ​97.0
Question
Several major theories have been developed in an attempt to explain international migration. The __________ assumes that migration patterns occur based on geographic differences in the supply and demand for labor.

A) ​Marxist perspective
B) ​neoclassical economic approach
C) ​demographic transition
D) ​split-labor-market theory
Question
__________ refers one explanation of the process by which some societies have moved from high birth and death rates to relatively low birth and death rates as a result of technological development.

A) ​Zero population growth
B) ​Population lag
C) ​Demographic transition
D) ​Cultural lag
Question
The most commonly used graphic depiction of the age-sex distribution of a population is called a __________.

A) ​demographic diagram
B) ​socio-ecological snapshot
C) ​population pyramid
D) ​actuarial graph
Question
Malthus argued that, if left unchecked, the earth's population would exceed the __________.

A) ​technological ability to increase the food supply
B) ​available food supply
C) ​overall ecological balance
D) ​earth's water supply
Question
According to the __________ perspective, overpopulation and rapid population growth result in global environmental problems, ranging from global warming and rain-forest destruction to famine and vulnerability to epidemics.

A) ​Malthusian
B) ​neo-Malthusian
C) ​Marxist
D) ​demographic transition
Question
__________ suggests that as the natural resources, land, and workforce in low-income countries with little or no industrialization have come under the influence of international markets, there has been a corresponding flow of migrants from those nations to the highly industrialized, high-income countries.

A) ​World systems theory
B) ​Split-labor-market theory
C) ​Network theory
D) ​Institutional theory
Question
During the demographic transition stage of __________, significant population growth occurs because birth rates are relatively high whereas death rates decline due to improvements in health, sanitation, and nutrition.

A) ​postindustrialization
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
Question
According to some contemporary economists using a Marxist perspective, the greatest crisis today facing low-income nations is __________, not a food shortage.

A) ​natural disaster
B) ​war
C) ​lack of contraception
D) ​capital shortage
Question
For economist Thomas Malthus, _________ is the only acceptable preventive check on population.

A) ​contraception
B) ​moral restraint
C) ​famine
D) ​disease
Question
Neo-Malthusians refer to ___________ as the point at which no population increase occurs from year to year because the number of births plus immigrants is equal to the number of deaths plus emigrants.

A) ​population lag
B) ​zero population growth
C) ​the transitional point
D) ​the demographic transition
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Deck 15: Population and Urbanization
1
In any given population, fertility will always be higher than fecundity.
False
2
At birth, the U.S. sex ratio is generally even at 100, indicating that an equal number of males and females is born.
False
3
Farming and agricultural-related work continues to be the dominant way of life in rural areas of the United States.
False
4
The majority of new urban growth comes from natural increases in population due to high birth rates and lower death rates.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Cities undergo economic recovery more quickly than do entire nations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
How large is the world's population today?​

A) ​6 billion
B) ​6.5 billion
C) ​7.2 billion
D) ​8 billion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
From a symbolic interactionist perspective, the city is a faceless and alienating place.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Today just a few hundred financial institutions and developers finance and construct most major and minor urban development projects around the country.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Demographers who have revised the model of the demographic transition have highlighted the interactive effects of what are actually multiple types of transitions taking place simultaneously.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Capitalism and innovative technologies are successfully solving the problems of overpopulation.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
11
The conflict perspective on the growth of cities is completely structural in its approach and explanations, focusing on the impact of capitalism.
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k this deck
12
Immigration to the United States has declined in recent years due to job loss and a period of economic crisis.
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k this deck
13
White women have a longer life expectancy than white men; however, African American men have a longer life expectancy than African American women.
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k this deck
14
Neo-Malthusians argue that improving the status of women, reducing religious intolerance, and ending racial discrimination are essential to solving the problem of overpopulation and rapid population growth.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
15
There is a lack of consensus among scholars about the consequences of global population growth.
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k this deck
16
Hispanics accounted for about half the population growth in suburban areas in the 2000s.
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17
In most areas of the world today, women are having fewer children than they have in the past.
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k this deck
18
Immigration is the only significant factor affecting population size and growth.
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k this deck
19
The demographic transition is an accurate model for describing the process of population growth in all societies.
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k this deck
20
In low-income, less-developed nations, infectious diseases remain the leading cause of death.
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k this deck
21
The term fecundity refers to_______________________.

A) ​the number of women between ages 15 and 45 in a population
B) ​the average number of children the women in a population have
C) ​the immigrant population in a given year, plus their new offspring
D) ​the potential number of children born to women who reproduced at biological capacity
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22
__________ countries are those in which women are not having enough children to ensure that on average a daughter will survive to childbearing age.

A) ​Low-fertility
B) ​Intermediate-fertility
C) ​Medium-fertility
D) ​High-fertility
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k this deck
23
Which of these is a social factor affecting fertility level?​

A) ​number of women ages 15 to 45
B) ​availability of affordable contraception
C) ​attitudes about ideal family size
D) ​infant mortality
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Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The United Nations defines high-, intermediate-, and low-fertility countries according to __________.

A) ​the total fecundity of the population
B) ​the total fertility of the average woman in the population
C) ​the average number of daughters who will live to childbearing age born to each woman
D) ​the level of fecundity minus total fertility
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25
According to the categories defined by the United Nations, the United States is a __________ country.

A) ​low-fertility
B) ​intermediate-fertility
C) ​medium-fertility
D) ​high-fertility
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26
Which of these characteristics is common to the women throughout the world who are having the most children?​

A) ​They live exclusively in poorer countries.
B) ​They live in urban areas and have little access to birth control.
C) ​They live in agricultural regions where infant mortality is high.
D) ​They tend to come from intermediate-level fertility countries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The primary cause of world population growth in recent years has been __________.

A) ​a decline in mortality
B) ​increased fertility with better nutrition
C) ​more multiple births globally
D) ​increasing immigration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
__________ refers to the actual level of childbearing for an individual or a population.

A) ​Reproduction
B) ​Fecundity
C) ​Fertility
D) ​Fruitfulness
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
__________ is a subfield of sociology that examines population size, composition, and distribution.

A) ​Ecology
B) ​Demography
C) ​Social psychology
D) ​Graphology
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30
The simplest measure of mortality is the __________ rate.

A) ​crude death
B) ​total death
C) ​death quota
D) ​refined death
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k this deck
31
Eighteen percent of the world's population lives in __________ countries.

A) ​ow-fertility
B) ​intermediate-fertility
C) ​medium-fertility
D) ​high-fertility
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Unlock Deck
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32
In 2013, the crude birth rate in the United States was almost __________, compared with an all-time high rate of 27.0 per 1,000 in 1947 (following World War II).

A) ​5 per 1,000
B) ​10 per 1,000
C) ​12 per 1,000
D) ​18 per 1,000
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Demographers use the term __________ for a group of people who live in a specified geographic area and who are under study.

A) ​society
B) ​culture
C) ​country
D) ​population
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34
The __________ is measured as the number of deaths per 1,000 people in a population in a given year.

A) ​total death rate
B) ​crude death rate
C) ​death quota rate
D) ​refined death rate
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35
The __________ is the number of live births per 1,000 people in a population in a given year.

A) ​total fertility rate
B) ​crude birth rate
C) ​age-specific rate
D) ​nonrefined fertility
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k this deck
36
In 1900, the leading cause of death in the United States was __________.

A) ​kidney disease
B) ​influenza/pneumonia
C) ​accidents
D) ​heart disease
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
__________ is the potential number of children that could be born if every woman reproduced at her maximum biological capacity.

A) ​Reproduction
B) ​Fecundity
C) ​Fertility
D) ​Fruitfulness
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
In low-income countries, the leading cause of death is __________.

A) ​heart disease
B) ​accidents
C) ​infectious disease
D) ​stroke
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Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
The primary biological factor determining fertility within a particular society is __________.

A) ​number of women ages 15 to 45
B) ​availability of affordable contraception
C) ​governmental policy and regulations
D) ​infant mortality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The level of fertility in a society is based on biological and social factors, the primary biological factor being __________.

A) ​the general health and nutrition of women
B) ​the roles available to women in a society
C) ​the prevalent viewpoint regarding what constitutes the "ideal" family size
D) ​the number of women of childbearing age
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
__________ is an estimate of the average lifetime in years of people born in a specific year.

A) ​Life expectancy
B) ​Longevity determination
C) ​Life prospects
D) ​Life projection
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
One measure of population composition is the __________, which is the number of males for every hundred females in a given population.

A) ​sex ratio
B) ​rate of gender composition
C) ​demographic transition
D) ​gender gap
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Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The African slave trade to the Americas is the most striking example of __________.

A) ​external migration
B) ​involuntary migration
C) ​internal migration
D) ​voluntary migration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
In 2012, the U.S. infant mortality rate for African American infants was __________ per 1,000 live births.

A) ​7.2
B) ​12.4
C) ​13.8
D) ​19.8
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Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Over the past several decades, many people have moved from low-income countries to high-income countries throughout the world. This is an example of __________.

A) ​international migration
B) ​emigration
C) ​internal migration
D) ​cross-national migration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The __________ refers to the number of deaths of infants under 1 year of age per 1,000 live births in a given year.

A) ​underage mortality rate
B) ​infant mortality rate
C) ​child death index
D) ​infant death quotient
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The __________ is considered an important reflection of a society's level of preventive medical care, maternal nutrition, childbirth procedures, and neonatal care for infants.

A) ​crude death rate
B) ​fecundity minus actual fertility rate
C) ​infant mortality rate
D) ​life expectancy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
In urbanized areas, __________ may be measured by the number of people who live per room, per block, or per square mile.

A) ​density
B) ​migration
C) ​distribution
D) ​emigration
Unlock Deck
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49
Life expectancy varies by sex. Females born in the United States in 2014 could expect to live about __________ years, compared with a life expectancy of __________ for males.

A) ​68; 72
B) ​78; 75
C) ​81 ; 77
D) ​76; 81
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50
In 2010, the leading cause of death in the United States was __________.

A) ​cancer
B) ​chronic lung disease
C) ​diabetes
D) ​heart disease
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51
People migrate either voluntarily or involuntarily. Which of these is considered a "push" factor for international migration?

A) ​a natural disaster
B) ​a democratic government
C) ​religious freedom
D) ​employment opportunities
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52
__________ refers to the physical location of people throughout a geographic area; __________ is the term for the number of people within a given geographic area.

A) ​Migration; distribution
B) ​Distribution; density
C) ​Density; distribution
D) ​Immigration; distribution
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53
__________ is the movement of people from one geographic area to another for the purpose of changing residency. It affects the size and distribution of the population in a given area.

A) ​Immigration
B) ​Distribution
C) ​Migration
D) ​Emigration
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54
Which of these is considered a "pull" factor for international migration?

A) ​a natural disaster
B) ​war
C) ​religious freedom
D) ​harsh weather conditions
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55
__________ is the movement of people into a geographic area to take up residency; __________ is the movement of people out of a geographic area to take up residency elsewhere.

A) ​Distribution; migration
B) ​Migration; redistribution
C) ​Immigration; emigration
D) ​Emigration; immigration
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56
__________ is the number of people living in a specific geographic area.

A) ​Distribution
B) ​Migration
C) ​Emigration
D) ​Density
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57
Globally, the country with the lowest rate of infant mortality is __________.

A) ​the United States
B) ​Japan
C) ​Sweden
D) ​Hong Kong
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58
In 2012, the U.S. infant mortality rate for white infants was __________ per 1,000 live births.

A) ​3.0
B) ​5.3
C) ​7.3
D) ​9.4
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59
For persons born in the United States in 2014, life expectancy at birth was about __________.

A) ​70 years
B) ​74 years
C) ​79 years
D) ​82 years
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60
In the United States, after the Civil War, thousands of African Americans moved from the South to the North. This is an example of __________ .

A) ​international migration
B) ​emigration
C) ​internal migration
D) ​cross-national migration
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61
English economist __________, one of the first scholars to systematically study the effects of population, argued that "the power of population is infinitely greater than the power of the earth to produce subsistence (food) for man."

A) ​Emile Durkheim
B) ​Max Weber
C) ​Karl Marx
D) ​Thomas Malthus
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62
The __________ distribution of a population has a direct bearing on the demand for schooling, health, employment, housing, and pensions.

A) ​sex
B) ​age
C) ​race
D) ​income
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63
The enduring significant contribution of Marx and Engels to the study of demography is the suggestion that___________________________.

A) ​poverty, more than overpopulation, is the central issue relating to food supply in a capitalist country
B) ​the population grows exponentially while the food supply growths arithmetically, creating overpopulation
C) ​population would eventually be checked by natural and human-caused disasters
D) ​advanced technology should be used to produce food, not profits
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64
A conflict perspective on migration, the __________ suggests that immigrants from lowincome countries are often recruited for secondary-labor-market positions in other countries. Workers from high-income countries are recruited for primary sector employment.

A) ​network theory
B) ​institutional theory
C) ​world systems theory
D) ​split-labor-market theory
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65
English economist Thomas Malthus argued that the population would increase in a geometric (exponential) progression whereas the food supply would increase only by an arithmetic progression; thus, a __________ occurs.

A) ​doubling effect
B) ​negative check
C) ​preventive check
D) ​limit to growth
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66
During the demographic transition stage of ____________, little population growth occurs because high birth rates are offset by high death rates.

A) ​postindustrialization
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
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67
A population pyramid that is actually pyramidal in shape is likely to pertain to __________.

A) ​a high-income country
B) ​a low-fertility country
C) ​a high-fertility country
D) ​an intermediate-fertility country
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68
During the demographic transition stage of __________, birth rates continue to decline as more women gain full-time employment and the cost of raising children continues to increase. The population grows very slowly, if at all, because the decrease in birth rates is coupled with a stable death rate.

A) ​postindustrialization
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
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69
During the demographic transition stage of __________, very little population growth occurs because both birth rates and death rates are low.

A) ​agriculturalism
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
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70
In the United States, the estimated sex ratio for 2013 was __________​

A) ​75.4
B) ​82.3
C) ​88.6
D) ​97.0
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71
Several major theories have been developed in an attempt to explain international migration. The __________ assumes that migration patterns occur based on geographic differences in the supply and demand for labor.

A) ​Marxist perspective
B) ​neoclassical economic approach
C) ​demographic transition
D) ​split-labor-market theory
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72
__________ refers one explanation of the process by which some societies have moved from high birth and death rates to relatively low birth and death rates as a result of technological development.

A) ​Zero population growth
B) ​Population lag
C) ​Demographic transition
D) ​Cultural lag
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73
The most commonly used graphic depiction of the age-sex distribution of a population is called a __________.

A) ​demographic diagram
B) ​socio-ecological snapshot
C) ​population pyramid
D) ​actuarial graph
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74
Malthus argued that, if left unchecked, the earth's population would exceed the __________.

A) ​technological ability to increase the food supply
B) ​available food supply
C) ​overall ecological balance
D) ​earth's water supply
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75
According to the __________ perspective, overpopulation and rapid population growth result in global environmental problems, ranging from global warming and rain-forest destruction to famine and vulnerability to epidemics.

A) ​Malthusian
B) ​neo-Malthusian
C) ​Marxist
D) ​demographic transition
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76
__________ suggests that as the natural resources, land, and workforce in low-income countries with little or no industrialization have come under the influence of international markets, there has been a corresponding flow of migrants from those nations to the highly industrialized, high-income countries.

A) ​World systems theory
B) ​Split-labor-market theory
C) ​Network theory
D) ​Institutional theory
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77
During the demographic transition stage of __________, significant population growth occurs because birth rates are relatively high whereas death rates decline due to improvements in health, sanitation, and nutrition.

A) ​postindustrialization
B) ​early industrialization
C) ​advanced industrialization and urbanization
D) ​preindustrial societies
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78
According to some contemporary economists using a Marxist perspective, the greatest crisis today facing low-income nations is __________, not a food shortage.

A) ​natural disaster
B) ​war
C) ​lack of contraception
D) ​capital shortage
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79
For economist Thomas Malthus, _________ is the only acceptable preventive check on population.

A) ​contraception
B) ​moral restraint
C) ​famine
D) ​disease
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80
Neo-Malthusians refer to ___________ as the point at which no population increase occurs from year to year because the number of births plus immigrants is equal to the number of deaths plus emigrants.

A) ​population lag
B) ​zero population growth
C) ​the transitional point
D) ​the demographic transition
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.