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Chong, Sylvia N. Y.; Cheah, Horn Mun – New Horizons in Education, 2010
Background: Singapore is experiencing great demographic change. These demographic trends show fewer young people and declining birth rates, greater longevity for ageing generations and an increase in the number of non-Singaporean residents. Statistics also show that more than half of the total population increase in the last decades was…
Descriptors: Population Trends, Birth Rate, Lifelong Learning, Cultural Pluralism
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Myers, Scott M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Having a child is a major determinant of geographic mobility. Little is known, however, about the opposite process--whether geographic mobility is a determinant of fertility. Drawing on social and human capital theories and research on fertility and migration to develop competing hypotheses, the author examines the effects of mobility on changes…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Migration, Social Capital, Birth Rate
Graybeal, William – Today's Education, 1981
Higher education in the 1980s and the early 1990s will change as a result of reductions in the number of Americans reaching the traditional college enrollment age. In order to survive in the coming decades, many colleges and universities are making an effort to appeal to segments of the population that are not within the traditional age range. (JN)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Declining Enrollment, Enrollment Projections, Enrollment Trends
Panitch, Arnold; Cragin, Jeanne Marie – Migration World Magazine, 1991
Discusses the shifting population of Quebec Province; the cultural, social, and political issues regarding the province's low fertility rate; and how these affect immigration policy. Along with policies encouraging immigration, Quebec encourages enrollment of immigrant children in French-speaking schools. (SLD)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Demography, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrollment
Grier, Eunice; Grier, George – Executive Educator, 1990
Many of the demographic forces that affect enrollment projections can be anticipated: (1) changes in the birthrate; (2) immigration flows to the United States; (3) migration within the U.S.; and (4) policy decisions. Advises that enrollment projections be monitored yearly, and describes the cohort-survival method and the pupil-yield technique of…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Census Figures, Declining Enrollment, Demography
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van de Kaa, Dirk J. – Population Bulletin, 1987
By 1985, fertility rates in Europe were below the replacement level of 2.1 births per woman in all but Albania, Ireland, Malta, Poland, and Turkey, following a steady decline from a 1965 postwar peak well above 2.5 in Northern, Western, and Southern Europe and an erratic trend from a lower level in Eastern Europe. Natural decrease (fewer births…
Descriptors: Abortions, Birth Rate, Contraception, Demography
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Abernethy, Virginia – International Migration Review, 1996
Well-intentioned U.S. immigration policy has two ill effects in that it encourages the belief that emigration can relieve overpopulation in third-world countries, maintaining high fertility rates, and it results in U.S. domestic population growth that threatens employment opportunities and the environment. (SLD)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Developing Nations, Employment Opportunities, Environment