TITLE:
The population explosion.
AUTHOR:
Ehrlich PR, Ehrlich AH.
SOURCE:
New York, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1990. 320 p.
ABSTRACT:
In 1968, The Population Bomb warned of impending disaster if the population
explosion was not brought under control. Then the fuse was burning; now the
population bomb has detonated. Since 1968, at least 200 hunger-related diseases.
The size of the human population is now 5.3 billion and growing. In 1988, for
the 1st time since World War II, the US consumed more grain than it grew. About
1/3 of the country's grain crop was lost to a severe drought--roughly the fraction
that is normally exported. Over a hundred nations depend on food imported from
North America, and only the presence of large carryover stocks prevented a serious
food crisis. World grain production peaked in 1986 and then-- for the 1st time
in 40 years--dropped for 2 consecutive years. In those 2 years, world population
grew by the equivalent of the UK, France, and West Germany. In Africa south
of the Sahara, production per capita has been declining for more than 20 years
and in Latin America since 1981. The Population Bomb tried to alert people to
the connection of population growth to these events. Meanwhile, a prospective
disaster has turned into the real thing. The Population Explosion is being written
as ominous change in the life-support systems of civilization become more evident
daily. Chief among the underlying causes of our planet's unease is the overgrowth
of the human population and its impacts on both ecosystems and human communities.
This book is about the explosive growth of the human population and its effect
on us, our children, and our grandchildren.
YEAR:
1990
PIP#:
077114