The Population Debate: The Development of Conflicting Theories Up to 1900Houghton Mifflin, 1967 - 466 sider |
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Side 266
... gave demographic reasons for both the distress of the Irish in their homeland and their usefulness in the United States . For the former , he wrote of " The dis- tressed situation of the Irish nation , particularly the working class ...
... gave demographic reasons for both the distress of the Irish in their homeland and their usefulness in the United States . For the former , he wrote of " The dis- tressed situation of the Irish nation , particularly the working class ...
Side 299
... gave an essentially Ricardian ex- planation of rent , according to which increased demand , as from popula- tion growth , would lead to the use of poorer land and add to the amount of rent.192 The wage fund theory was accepted , but ...
... gave an essentially Ricardian ex- planation of rent , according to which increased demand , as from popula- tion growth , would lead to the use of poorer land and add to the amount of rent.192 The wage fund theory was accepted , but ...
Side 340
... gave eleven years as the probable average duration of the childbearing period of life , and 5 % as the maximum average number of children per family . From the latter figure Ravenstone computed that the shortest possible period of ...
... gave eleven years as the probable average duration of the childbearing period of life , and 5 % as the maximum average number of children per family . From the latter figure Ravenstone computed that the shortest possible period of ...
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Fluctuation in Population Thought | 1 |
Early Population Thought | 9 |
The Rise of Population Theory in the Seventeenth | 28 |
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