Demographers and the Study of Mortality: Scope, Perspectives, and Theory

dc.contributor.authorCaldwell, John
dc.date.accessioned2015-12-13T23:40:08Z
dc.date.available2015-12-13T23:40:08Z
dc.date.issued2002
dc.date.updated2015-12-12T09:27:58Z
dc.description.abstractDemographers have for a long time adopted an empirical approach to the study of the levels and trends of mortality, fertility, and population size. They depend for their analyses on data, usually collected until recent times by government and often for other purposes. Modern demography had its origins in Britain in the second haft of the seventeenth century. The major focus of demographers has usually been on mortality, although fertility studies predominated in the 1960s and 1970s. Mortality decline in the West only became certain in the late nineteenth century. Until the 1960s the fastest mortality declines were for the young, but an unheralded mortality decline among the old thereafter became important. The world, especially in economically advanced countries, is faced with an increasingly high proportion of old people, explained largely, not by mortality decline, but by fertility decline. Explanations for the mortality transition place different emphases on the role of modern medicine, better nutrition, and behavioral and social change, particularly rising levels of education. Even among the old, at least until 85 years of age, there are wide differentials in mortality by educational level. Analysts have divided the mortality transition into stages: (1) high, pretransitional mortality, (2) early transitional mortality with the decline explained by the conquest of infectious disease, and (3) late transitional mortality largely attributable to degenerative disease. Some have now added stage (4), the reduction or delay in death from degenerative causes. Attempts have been made to effect the convergence of demographic and epidemiological approaches to the analysis of mortality, and they have been more successful in the case of medical demographic than in social demographic approaches.
dc.identifier.issn0077-8923
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/94320
dc.publisherNew York Academy of Sciences
dc.sourceAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
dc.subjectKeywords: aging; conference paper; degenerative disease; demography; empiricism; fertility; human; infection; mortality; population dynamics; theory; Adult; Aged; Cause of Death; Demography; Female; Fertility; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Male; Mortality; Population Dy Aged; Causes of death; Demographic empiricism; Demography; Epidemiology; Health transition; Mortality; Mortality transition; Old age mortality; Population; Wealth flows theory
dc.titleDemographers and the Study of Mortality: Scope, Perspectives, and Theory
dc.typeJournal article
local.bibliographicCitation.lastpage35
local.bibliographicCitation.startpage19
local.contributor.affiliationCaldwell, John, College of Medicine, Biology and Environment, ANU
local.contributor.authoruidCaldwell, John, u4045011
local.description.notesImported from ARIES
local.description.refereedYes
local.identifier.absfor160399 - Demography not elsewhere classified
local.identifier.ariespublicationMigratedxPub23883
local.identifier.citationvolume954
local.identifier.scopusID2-s2.0-0035683118
local.type.statusPublished Version

Downloads