* Filmed: February 2006
* Running time: 19.50 minutes
* Description: This talk describes the changes that have occurred and are
predicted to occur in wealth distribution, fertility rates, population growth, and
health within and between countries. Hans Rosling displays statistics using
extremely interesting and unique graphics of changing trends. He breaks down
several myths relating to difference between economically less developed and
more developed countries.
* Rating: Excellent
* 7-Revolutions Section: Population, Economic Integration, Technology
* Released 1999
* Running time: 60 minutes
* Produced by Berkeley Media and available through their website
http://www.berkeleymedia.com/
* Educational discounts are available; be sure to ask. A review quoted on their site
says: "This film manages, miraculously, not to fall into the simplistic trap of
equating population growth with abstract numbers that count up doom and
disaster. Rather, it reminds us that this is the most human of all subjects, and its
future depends above all on the human lives of young women, who live in many
different circumstances in many parts of the earth. It depicts these young
women, appropriately, as looking ahead to lives very different from those of
their mothers -- lives at a global turning point toward lower birth rates and
population stabilization." -- Donella Meadows, Prof. of Environmental Studies,
Dartmouth Univ.
We love this article at KSU and use it each semester. Some use it as an introductory read to discuss the global challenges in general while others use it in GC 1 to talk more specifically about issues surrounding population growth. Well documented, thorough read that never fails to spark discussion.
This New York Times article describes the implications of achieving a global population of seven billion people and examines the possibilities for population growth and related issues into the future.