Dictionary Definition
populate
Verb
1 make one's home or live in; "She resides
officially in Iceland"; "I live in a 200-year old house"; "These
people inhabited all the islands that are now deserted"; "The
plains are sparsely populated" [syn: dwell, shack, reside, live, inhabit, people, domicile, domiciliate]
2 fill with people or supply with inhabitants;
"people a room"; "The government wanted to populate the remote area
of the country" [syn: people]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Latin populus the peopleVerb
transitiveTranslations
to live in
- Dutch: bevolken
- French: peupler
to fill a list
- French: remplir
Extensive Definition
In sociology and biology a population is the
collection of inter-breeding organisms of a particular species. A population shares a
particular characteristic of interest most often that of living in
a given geographic
area. In taxonomy population is a
low-level taxonomic
rank.
Human populations can be defined by many
characteristics such as mortality, migration,
family (marriage and divorce), public
health, work and the
labor
force, and family
planning. Various aspects of human behavior in populations are
also studied in sociology, economics, and geography.
Study of populations is almost always governed by
the laws of probability, and the
conclusions of the studies may thus not always be applicable to
some individuals. This odd factor may be reduced by statistical
means, but such a generalization may be too vague to imply
anything. Demography is used extensively in marketing, which relates to
economic units, such as retailers, to potential customers. For
example, a coffee shop
that wants to sell to a younger audience looks at the demographics
of an area to be able to appeal to this younger audience.
World Population
According to papers published by the United States Census Bureau, the world population hit 6.5 billion (6,500,000,000) on January 25 2006. The United Nations Population Fund designated October 12 1999 as the approximate day on which world population reached 6 billion. This was about 12 years after world population reached 5 billion, in 1987. However, the population of some countries, such as Nigeria, is not even known to the nearest million, so there is a considerable margin of error in such estimates.In 2008 the United Nations Population Division
projected that the world's population will likely surpass 9 billion
in 2050. The last 50 years have seen a rapid increase in population
due to
medical advances and substantial increase in agricultural
productivity, particularly in the period 1960 to 1995 made by the
Green
Revolution.
Population control
Population control is the practice of curtailing population increase, usually by reducing the birth rate. Surviving records from Ancient Greece document the first known examples of population control. These include the colonization movement, which saw Greek outposts being built across the Mediterranean and Black Sea basins to accommodate the excess population of individual states. Infanticide, including abortion, was encouraged in some Greek city states in order to keep population down.An important example of mandated population
control is
China's one-child
policy, in which having more than one child is made extremely
unattractive. This has led to allegations that practices like
forced abortions, forced sterilization, and infanticide are used as
a result of the policy. The country's sex ratio at
birth of 112 boys to 100 girls may be evidence that the latter is
often
sex-selective. However, other countries without a one-child
policy also have similar sex ratios.
It is helpful to distinguish between
fertility control as individual decision-making and population
control as a governmental or state-level policy of regulating
population growth. Fertility control may occur when individuals or
couples or families take steps to decrease or to regulate the
timing of their own child-bearing. In Ansley
Coale's oft-cited formulation, three preconditions for a
sustained decline in fertility are: (1) acceptance of calculated
choice (as opposed to fate or chance or divine will) as a valid
element in fertility, (2) perceived advantages from reduced
fertility, and (3) knowledge and mastery of effective techniques of
control. In contrast to a society with natural
fertility, a society that desires to limit fertility and has
the means to do so may use those means to delay childbearing, space
childbearing, or stop childbearing. Delaying sexual intercourse (or
marriage), or the adoption of natural or artificial means of
contraception are most often an individual or family decision, not
a matter of a state policy or societal-wide sanctions. On the other
hand, individuals who assume some sense of control over their own
fertility can also accelerate the frequency or success of
child-bearing through planning.
At the societal level, declining fertility is
almost an inevitable result of growing secular education of women .
However, the exercise of moderate to high levels of fertility
control does not necessarily imply low fertility rates. Even among
societies that exercise substantial fertility control, societies
with an equal ability to exercise fertility control (to determine
how many children to have and when to bear them) may display widely
different levels of fertility (numbers of children borne)
associated with individual and cultural preferences for the number
of children or size of families.
In contrast to fertility control, which is mainly
an individual-level decision, governments may attempt to exercise
population control by increasing access to means of contraception
or by other population policies and programs.For a discussion of
the range of "population policy" options available to governments,
see Paul Demeny, "Population Policy: A Concise Summary," Population
Council, Policy Research Division, Working Paper No. 173
(2003)http://www.popcouncil.org/pdfs/wp/173.pdf.
The idea of "population control" as a governmental or
societal-level regulation of population growth does not require
"fertility control" in the sense that it has been defined above,
since a state can affect the growth of a society's population even
if that society practices little fertility control. It's also
important to embrace policies favoring population increase as an
aspect of population control, and not to assume that states want to
control population only by limiting its growth. To stimulate
population growth, governments may support not only immigration but also
pronatalist policies such as tax benefits, financial awards, paid
work leaves, and childcare to encourage the bearing of additional
children. Such policies have been pursued in recent years in France
and Sweden, for example. With the same goal of increasing
population growth, on occasion governments have sought to limit the
use of abortion or modern means of birth control. An example was
Romania's
1966 ban on access to contraception and abortion on demand.
In ecology, population control is on occasions
considered to be done solely by predators, diseases, parasites, and environmental
factors. At many times human effects on animal and plant
populations are also considered. See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting#Wildlife_management.
Migrations of animals may be seen as a natural way of population
control, for the food on land is more abundant on some seasons. The area of the
migrations' start is left to reproduce the food supply for large
mass of animals next time around. See also immigration.
See also
- 1907 populations
- Biological dispersal
- Biological exponential growth
- Demography
- List of countries by fertility rate
- List of countries by population
- List of countries by population density
- List of religious populations
- Nurgaliev's law
- Overpopulation
- Population density
- Population ecology
- World largest cities
Notes
External links
- Population Activities Unit of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. Promoting policy dialogues among the UNECE Member States on various facets of demographic change in Europe and North America.
- Underpopulation? MercatorNet
- World Population Counter, and separate regions.
- Current World Population from the US Census Bureau
- The Optimum Population Trust. A reliable and intelligent source of population information.
- Phishare.org (2005). Population and Health InfoShare. Retrieved February 13 2005.
- Population Reference Bureau (2005). Retrieved February 13 2005.
- Populationworld.com (2005). Population World: Population of World. Retrieved February 13 2004.
- United Nations (2004). Population Division, Department of Economic and Social Affairs. Retrieved February 13 2004.
- United States Census Bureau (2005). Census Bureau - Countries Ranked by Population. Retrieved February 13 2005.
- PopulationData.net (2005). PopulationData.net - Informations and maps about populations around the world. Retrieved March 4 2005.
- World Population Clock (French) WorldPopClock.com - World population clock.
- Committee for International Cooperation in National Research in Demography Digital library: Complete collection of books and countries monographs published by CICRED from 1973 until today.
- New England Coalition for Sustainable Population NECSP HomePage
- Population in the News Daily news round-up
- SIEDS, Italian Society of Economics Demography and Statistics
populate in Afrikaans: Bevolking
populate in Amharic: የዓለም የህዝብ ብዛት
populate in Arabic: تعداد السكان
populate in Asturian: Población
populate in Min Nan: Jîn-kháu
populate in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Насельніцтва
populate in Breton: Poblañs
populate in Bulgarian: Население
populate in Catalan: Població mundial
populate in Chuvash: Халăх йышě
populate in Czech: Obyvatelstvo
populate in Welsh: Poblogaeth
populate in Danish: Befolkning
populate in German: Bevölkerung
populate in Estonian: Rahvaarv
populate in Modern Greek (1453-):
Πληθυσμός
populate in Spanish: Población
populate in Esperanto: Loĝantaro
populate in French: Population
populate in Western Frisian: Befolking
populate in Friulian: Popolazion
populate in Classical Chinese: 人口
populate in Korean: 인구
populate in Hindi: जनसंख्या
populate in Croatian: Stanovništvo
populate in Icelandic: Fólksfjöldi
populate in Italian: Popolazione
populate in Hebrew: אוכלוסייה
populate in Javanese: Pedunung
populate in Georgian: მოსახლეობა
populate in Haitian: Popilasyon
populate in Latvian: Iedzīvotāju skaits
populate in Lithuanian: Populiacija
populate in Hungarian: Populáció
populate in Dutch: Bevolking
populate in Japanese: 人口
populate in Norwegian: Befolkning
populate in Occitan (post 1500):
Populacion
populate in Portuguese: População
populate in Romanian: Populaţie
populate in Russian: Население Земли
populate in Simple English: Population
populate in Slovenian: Prebivalstvo
populate in Sundanese: Populasi
populate in Finnish: Väkiluku
populate in Swedish: Befolkning
populate in Tagalog: Populasyon
populate in Telugu: జనాభా
populate in Thai: ประชากร
populate in Turkish: Dünya nüfusu
populate in Udmurt: Улӥсьёс
populate in Venetian: Popołazsion
populate in Vlaams: Bevolkienge
populate in Yiddish: באפעלקערונג
populate in Zeeuws: Bevolkienge
populate in Chinese: 人口
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
anchor,
billet at, bivouac,
burrow, camp, colonize, come to anchor,
denizen, domesticate, drop anchor,
dwell in, empeople,
ensconce, establish
residence, hive, inhabit, keep house, live at,
live in, locate, moor, move, nest, occupy, park, people, perch, plant, relocate, reside, reside in, roost, set up housekeeping, set up
shop, settle, settle
down, settle in, sit down, squat, stand, stay at, strike root, take
residence at, take root, take up residence