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Demographic Projection Techniques For Regions And Smaller Areas A Primer H Davis

  • SKU: BELL-5032204
Demographic Projection Techniques For Regions And Smaller Areas A Primer H Davis
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Demographic Projection Techniques For Regions And Smaller Areas A Primer H Davis instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Washington Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 6.22 MB
Pages: 116
Author: H. Davis
ISBN: 9780774805018, 0774805013
Language: English
Year: 2002

Product desciption

Demographic Projection Techniques For Regions And Smaller Areas A Primer H Davis by H. Davis 9780774805018, 0774805013 instant download after payment.

The ability to project population trends is of vital importance for anyone involved in planning - in the public as well as private sector. This book provides the tools for making such projections and discusses four principal approaches: mathematical extrapolation, comparative methods, cohort survival and migration models. Following the introductory chapter, which considers the need and uses of population projections, the next two chapters are concerned with mathematical extrapolation techniques, as they are the tools most commonly used to project the size of a population and are also frequently employed in projecting components of one or more of the other three approaches. In chapter three, the author outlines a four-step projection procedure which is used throughout the remainder of the book. Chapter four describes how to project population size by comparing the growth pattern of the population under study with that of another population. The next chapter covers one of the most commonly employed techniques of population projection - the cohort survival model, which is used not only to project the size of a population but also its composition in terms of age and sex groupings. The final chapter focuses on migration, generally the most volatile component of the basic demographic equation. This book should be welcome as an up-to-date text for courses in planning, but it should also be useful for anyone required to make decisions affected by population trends, whether they involve planning for future growth of alerting local decision makers to external uncertainties which can have a serious impact on the future of their community.

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