About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all books by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Title

BOOKS
About the AEI Press
Orders and Shipping
Book Reviews
Press Releases

AEI Classics

AEI is rereleasing some of its most prescient and groundbreaking works from its earliest thinkers and innovators. These books, part of a series called AEI Classics, are available for download as Adobe Acrobat PDFs.

E-NEWSLETTERS
Enter e-mail:
 

Home >  Books >  Prosperous Paupers and Other Population Problems
Prosperous Paupers and Other Population Problems
Print Mail
By Nicholas Eberstadt
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
Prosperous Paupers and Other Population Problems
Dimensions: 9.25'' x 6.25''
256 pages
Transaction Publishers
Publication Date: January 2000
Hardcover
ISBN: 1560004231

In current intellectual and public discourse, the entire modern world--from the affluent United States to the poorest low-income regions--is beset today by a broad and alarming array of "population problems." Around the globe, leading scientists, academics, and political figures attribute poverty, hunger, social tension, and even political conflict to contemporary demographic trends. These authorities assert that the size, composition, and growth rate of population routinely pose direct and major threats to human well-being. They argue for interventions aimed specifically at altering society's demographic rhythms. In this wide-ranging and carefully reasoned book, renowned demographer and social scientist Nicholas Eberstadt challenges these ideas and exposes their glaring intellectual shortcomings.

Eberstadt makes the case that the very conception of "population problems" is inherently ambiguous and arbitrary, lending itself to faulty analysis and inappropriate diagnoses. Careless thinking about population is typically a result of inattention to, or indifference toward, the fundamental unit in all populations: the individual human being. In our time, Eberstadt writes, problems attributed to demographic trends are actually rooted in political and ethical situations. The brave new world of economic reform, far from bringing about the good society, serves only to postpone that society by a cavalier disregard of social and culture factors in human evolution.

Eberstadt warns against a melodramatic approach to issues such as hunger and malnutrition. Material advances in the economy and cultural advances in the polity are safeguards against the worst outcomes of current problems in population. His reversal of cause and effect marks this as a volume apart, provocative, controversial, but surefooted in its scholarly sensibility and methods. In an academic world in which demographers are now speaking of the peaking of population rather than its infinite expansion, Eberstadt moves the discussion to family ties and common bonds. Demographers and family planners alike have much to learn from an approach that takes seriously the pitfalls as well as blessings of so-called zero-growth in the world population.

Nicholas Eberstadt holds AEI's Henry Wendt Chair in Political Economy. His recent works include The End of North Korea (1999) and The Tyranny of Numbers: Mismeasurement and Misrule (1995).



Table of Contents

Introduction

Part I: Population Problems in the United States

  • Prosperous Paupers and Affluent Savages: The New Challenges to Social Policy in America
  • Why Babies Die in D.C.
  • Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Epidemiologist

Part II: Population Problems Under Communism

  • Mortality and the Fate of Communist States
  • The Soviet Way of Death
  • Health and Mortality in Eastern Europe: Retrospect and Prospect
  • Demographic Shocks in Eastern Germany, 1989-1993

Part III: Global Population Problems

  • Justifying Population Control: The Latest Argument
  • Starved for Ideas: Misconceptions that Hinder the Battle Against World Hunger
  • Population Prospects for Eastern Asia to 2015: Trends and Implications
  • What If It's a World Population Implosion? Speculations about Global De-Population

Index



View Book Summary
Related Links
Order from Barnes and Noble


Also by Nicholas Eberstadt
Recent Articles
The Poverty of the Official Poverty Rate
Foreign Aid: What Works and What Doesn't
Rising Ambitions, Sinking Population
Latest Book
The Poverty of "The Poverty Rate"
Measure and Mismeasure of Want in Modern America
Making a Killing
Making a Killing

In Making a Killing: The Deadly Implications of the Counterfeit Drug Trade, AEI resident fellow Roger Bate analyzes the burgeoning international trade in counterfeit drugs and recommends steps that governments and law enforcement agencies could take to stop it.


Air Quality in America
Air Quality in America

This detailed, data-driven book rebuts mistaken perceptions that U.S. air quality is bad by documenting marked improvements over the past decades.


Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge- thumbnail
Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge

The promise of "healthy aging" offers significant opportunities for economic growth and development for Europe in the decades ahead--if governments and citizens are willing to grasp them.