Population and world politics: The interrelationships between demographic factors and international relations
In: Publications of the Netherlands Interuniversity Demographic Institute (N.I.D.I.) and the Population and Family Study Centre (C.B.G.S.) 4
In: Publications of the Netherlands Interuniversity Demographic Institute (NIDI) and the Population and Family Study Centre (CBGS) 4
1. Population, politics and policy -- 1.1. On Method -- 1.2. Population Policy -- 1.3. Migration -- 2. Population, power and the state -- 2.1. Total Population and the Power Inventory -- 2.2. Population Density, Social Organization and Power -- 2.3. Population, Production and the Dependency Burden -- 2.4. Population Optima -- 2.5. Population and Economic Development -- 2.6. Population and Power -- 3. Population and war -- 3.1. Population and the Causation of War -- 3.2. The Malthusian Explanation -- 3.3. Some Hypotheses on Population and War -- 3.4. Population Growth and Density, Resources and Subsistence: Man-Land Relationships and Their Relevance for the Study of War -- 3.5. Crowding, Social Pathology and Aggression -- 3.6. Population Growth, Domestic Conflict and War -- 3.7. Demographic Consequences of War -- 3.8. Human Losses and the Termination of Conflict -- 3.9. Conflict and Catastrophic Population Decline -- 3.10. The Causation of War: A Review of the Hypotheses -- 3.11. Does War Have a Demographic Function? -- 3.12. Population, Aggression and the State -- 4. Population, social morphology and international relations -- 4.1. The Regulation of Human Populations -- 4.2. The Perception of Population Trends -- 4.3. Population and Collective Action -- 4.4. Population and Future International Politics -- References.