The slowing of the exponential curve of demography after the 1970s muted the neo-Malthusian voices. |
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If we start to speak about the subject we get accused of being neo-Malthusian. |
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This is a very 1970s neo-Malthusian view, and it disregards political economy. |
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And, yes, because neo-Malthusian arguments are populating the analytical and policy gaps. |
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Empirical research seemed to discredit the neo-Malthusian view. |
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Not so long ago, the conventional wisdom was neo-Malthusian — for individuals, for families and for societies, one of the keys to prosperity was having fewer children. |
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Dorling doesn't mention these neo-Malthusian liberals because they don't fit the story he wants to tell, which is that the only limits on population are those imposed by oppressive human institutions. |
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The international Community is still influenced by a neo-Malthusian approach and uses funds for contraception programs to reduce the number of births rather than promote the general development of humanity. |
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The rapid expansion of China's population from 1949 to the late 1970s stoked the flames of neo-Malthusian demographers. |
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I remember that in the late '60s a neo-Malthusian theory was popular among some intellectuals. |
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The authors engage readers politically and critically, deconstructing the neo-Malthusian concept of scarcity through water, food, and energy. |
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Hagmann was critical of what he sees as variations on the neo-Malthusian viewpoint, which look for a deterministic relationship between the scarcity of resources and violent conflict. |
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But what about the neo-Malthusian proposition that unsustainable economic practices lead, at some point, to environmental overload and social catastrophe? |
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Neo-Malthusian demographers will feel vindicated by the theory of secular cycles. |
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