10 research outputs found

    THE DEMOGRAPHY OF ENVIRONMENTAL MIGRATION

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    Population et environnement à Hanoi.

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    3 p. (Communication aux VIe Journées démographiques de l'ORSTOM, Paris, 22-24 septembre 1997).Results of a socio-demographic survey implemented by the National Institute for Urban and Rural Planning. Urban environment (housing, pollution, insecurity...) is already a major concern of the population at the starting up of a rapid urban growth.Résultats d'une enquête socio-démographique menée par l'Institut National de Planification Urbaine et Rurale. L'environnement urbain (habitat, pollution, insécurité...) est déjà une préoccupation majeure de la population à l'aube d'une croissance urbaine rapide

    The boundaries of genocide: Quantifying the uncertainty of the death toll during the Pol Pot regime in Cambodia (1975–79)

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    The range of estimates of excess deaths under Pol Pot's rule of Cambodia (1975-79) is too wide to be useful: they range from under 1 to over 3 million, with the more plausible estimates still varying from 1 to 2 million. By stochastically reconstructing population dynamics in Cambodia from extant historical and demographic data, we produced interpretable distributions of the death toll and other demographic indicators. The resulting 95 per cent simulation interval (1.2-2.8 million excess deaths) demonstrates substantial uncertainty over the exact scale of mortality, yet it still excludes nearly half of the previous death-toll estimates. The 1.5-2.25 million interval contains 69 per cent of the simulations for the actual number of excess deaths, more than the wider (1-2 million) range of previous plausible estimates. The median value of 1.9 million excess deaths represents 21 per cent of the population at risk. Supplementary material for this article is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00324728.2015.1045546

    The Impact of Past Conflicts and Social Disruption on the Elderly in Cambodia

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    Cambodia experienced violence during the rule of the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. Many who died were the children or spouses of today's elderly. This may have resulted in an erosion of family support in a country where formal channels of assistance are virtually absent. This article examines the extent to which current Cambodian elderly experienced deaths of children or spouses, forced migration, and separation from family during the Khmer Rouge period and the extent to which these experiences are associated with adverse welfare conditions of older adults. Data come from a 2004 representative survey of persons aged 60 years and older. More than one in four report that a child died from violent causes during the Khmer Rouge period. More than one in five report death of multiple children. A striking, and on the surface counterintuitive, conclusion is that the impact of deaths on welfare is modest. The reasons, elucidated in the article, include close family integration, high fertility among the current generation of older adults, the probability that losses depended on family size, and the pervasiveness of poverty. Copyright 2006 The Population Council, Inc..
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