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Q 1/41
Score 0
The 78 million people born, following World War II (1945-1964); now aging population
30
*Baby Boomers*
Q 2/41
Score 0
A complete count of of a population, usually every 10 years
30
Census
41 questions
Q.
The 78 million people born, following World War II (1945-1964); now aging population
1
30 sec
Q.
A complete count of of a population, usually every 10 years
2
30 sec
Q.
Total number of live births in a year for every 1,000 people in the society
3
30 sec
Q.
Total number of deaths per 1,000 people in a society
4
30 sec
Q.
The areas of earth occupied by human settlement; habitable lands
5
30 sec
Q.
Annual number of deaths of infants(one and under) compared to the number of live births
6
30 sec
Q.
Non-industrialized/poor countries.
7
30 sec
Q.
A figure indicating how long, on average, a person may be expected to live
8
30 sec
Q.
The theory that population grows faster than food supply
9
30 sec
Q.
Industrialized country; Stage 4/5
10
30 sec
Q.
Measurement of population per area or unit
11
30 sec
Q.
Pattern of where people live; how people are spread out
12
30 sec
Q.
A bar graph representing the distribution of population by age and sex.
13
30 sec
Q.
Programs to decrease the number of births (China's One Child Policy; contraceptives; education; sterilzation)
14
30 sec
Q.
Programs encouraging the bearing of children (paid maternity leave)
15
30 sec
Q.
Average number of children a woman will have during her 'birthing' years
16
30 sec
Q.
The scientific study of population characteristics
17
30 sec
Q.
When the number of people in an area exceeds the capacity of the environment to support life at a decent standard of living.
18
30 sec
Q.
An area of land where people are most dense, including East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Western Europe.
19
30 sec
Q.
Model of how the size of a population changes as a country develops its economy
20
30 sec
Q.
Model highlighting the distinctive causes of death in each stage of the demographic transition
21
30 sec
Q.
Pestilence and Famine
22
30 sec
Q.
Receding Pandemics
23
30 sec
Q.
Degenerative/Chronic Diseases
24
30 sec
Q.
Delayed Degenerative Diseases
25
30 sec
Q.
Reemergence of infectious diseases
26
30 sec
Q.
Most migrants travel only a short distance; Migrants who move longer distances tend to choose major cities; Young, single, adult males more likely to migrate
27
30 sec
Q.
Someone who has been forced to flee his or her country because of persecution, war/violence, and crosses an international border
28
30 sec
Q.
People flee their own country and seek sanctuary in another country, but whose claim has not yet been definitively evaluated.
29
30 sec
Q.
The loss of highly educated and skilled workers to other countries due to large-scale emigration
30
30 sec
Q.
A foreign laborer living and working temporarily in another country
31
30 sec
Q.
Environmental or cultural feature of the landscape that hinders migration; a nearer opportunity that greatly diminished the attractiveness of sites farther away
32
30 sec
Q.
Permanent movement within the same country
33
30 sec
Q.
The seasonal migration of livestock between mountains and lowland pastures (sheep herders mostly in Europe & Africa)
34
30 sec
Q.
Money migrants send back to family and friends in their home countries
35
30 sec
Q.
Develops when migrants move along and through kinship (familial or friend) links
36
30 sec
Q.
Negative home conditions that induces the decision to migrate (leave)
37
30 sec
Q.
A factor that draws or attracts people to another location
38
30 sec
Q.
Migration from one country to another country.
39
30 sec
Q.
A cluster of an ethnic population that is distinct from those in the surrounding area