53:30001 Alonso,
William. Population in an interacting world. ISBN
0-674-69008-7. LC 86-20133. 1987. 286 pp. Harvard University Press:
Cambridge, Massachusetts/London, England. In Eng.
This is a
collection of essays by various authors on aspects of global population
linkages. The papers were discussed at a conference held at Harvard
University in 1983. The emphasis is on the links between the
populations of rich and poor countries. The first part contains four
essays on history and structure. The second part is concerned with
economics, politics, and community. Topics covered include labor
migration to developed countries, the international division of labor,
social problems associated with assimilation, refugees, and the
emerging West Atlantic migration system involving the United States and
the Caribbean-Central American region.
Location: New York
Public Library.
53:30002 Derrick,
Christopher. Too many people? A problem in values.
ISBN 0-89870-071-X. LC 85-060469. 1985. 110 pp. Ignatius Press: San
Francisco, California. In Eng.
This is a philosophical study on
global population issues. The author examines questions of
overpopulation from an orthodox Roman Catholic viewpoint. He suggests
that too much emphasis has been placed on the means of population
control and too little on whether there is a population problem in the
first place. In particular, he questions the value judgements that
lead to the identification of a population problem requiring a
solution.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30003 Germany,
Federal Republic of. Bundesinstitut fur Bevolkerungsforschung
(Wiesbaden, Germany, Federal Republic of). Papers given at
the German-French Conference on Demography from September 30 to October
3, 1985, in Dijon. [Referate zum deutsch-franzosischen
Arbeitstreffen auf dem Gebiet der Demographie vom 30. September bis 3.
Oktober 1985 in Dijon.] Materialien zur Bevolkerungswissenschaft, No.
49, 1986. 134 pp. Wiesbaden, Germany, Federal Republic of. In Eng.
This is a compilation of 10 studies presented at the German-French
Conference on Demography, held in Dijon from September 30 to October 3,
1985. Papers are included on population trends, migration, nuptiality,
population projections, employment, population growth and the food
supply, birth spacing, marital fertility, and the short-term
forecasting of demographic rates.
Selected items will be cited in
this or subsequent issues of Population Index.
Location:
Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30004 Shelestov,
Dmitry. Demography in the mirror of history. 1987.
215 pp. Progress Publishers: Moscow, USSR. In Eng.
"The principal
objective of this work is to describe the origin and development of
Soviet demography grounded on Marxist-Leninist methodology. Since this
process is not isolated, but inseparably linked with the entire history
of demography, it was necessary to also deal with the basic stages in
the formation of scientific knowledge about population trends....The
first two essays are introductory and about the general history of
demography. They deal with the development of scientific studies of
population from the 16th through the 18th centuries, the origin of
demography in the 19th century, and the general development of the
science in the 20th century. The next three essays...are on the book's
main subject; they analyse such key problems as the Marxist-Leninist
upheaval in studying population [and] the origin and development of
Soviet demography."
Location: Princeton University Library
(SPR).
53:30005 Skriver,
Ansgar. Too many people? The demographic catastrophe is
avoidable. [Zu viele Menschen? Die Bevolkerungskatastrophe ist
vermeidbar.] Serie Piper, Vol. 503, ISBN 3-492-00803-8. 1986. 207 pp.
Piper: Munich, Germany, Federal Republic of. In Ger.
The author
discusses the causes and consequences of population growth as well as
issues related to current global population trends. Specifically, he
argues against the hypothesis that decreasing the number of people
necessarily increases the general standard of living. Among the topics
of focus are the environmental consequences of growing populations,
flaws in the thinking behind family planning programs, the relationship
between population pressure and war, the effect of tradition on
reproductive behavior, and the role of the church in the population
debate. Several chapters are devoted to the special population
problems of specific nations or groups within a nation. The author
takes issue with policies aimed at imposing fertility controls on
underdeveloped countries. In conclusion, it is asserted that the
primary population problem is the disproportionate share of the world's
resources being absorbed by the populations of the developed
countries.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30006 United
Nations Fund for Population Activities [UNFPA] (New York, New
York). 1986 report by the Executive Director of the United
Nations Fund for Population Activities. Pub. Order No.
87/32001/E/8000. ISBN 0-89714-051-6. [1987?]. 180 pp. New York, New
York. In Eng.
This report on the work of the United Nations Fund
for Population Activities (UNFPA) in 1986 also contains a review of the
state of world population in 1987. The review considers the
demographic contrasts between the developed and developing worlds, the
implications of rapid population growth, and rebuttals to the arguments
in favor of population growth.
Location: Princeton
University Library (SPR).
53:30007 Behar, Cem
L. Malthus and the development of demographic
analysis. Population Studies, Vol. 41, No. 2, Jul 1987. 269-81 pp.
London, England. In Eng.
"The objective of this article is to
determine Malthus's place in the history of demographic analysis and
concepts and to evaluate his personal contribution to demographic
analysis. Fertility and mortality analysis, as well as the influence
of past and contemporary demographers on Malthus's work are examined.
It appears that Malthus's best pieces of demographic analysis are owed
directly to Joshua Milne's or Price's influence. It seems highly
unlikely that his personal contribution to the development of
demographic techniques as such could be considered as of
consequence."
Author's address: Department of Economics, Bogazici
University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Location: Princeton
University Library (SPR).
53:30008 Cattolica,
Hector. Five billion human beings on earth. [5 mil
milhoes de seres humanos sobre a terra.] 1987. 43 pp. Instituto
Nacional de Estatistica [INE], Centro de Estudos Demograficos: Lisbon,
Portugal. In Por.
The data in this volume were assembled in
response to the United Nations declaration of July 11, 1987, marking
the day when the population of the earth reached 5 billion. Part 1
contains sections on population growth and projected growth from 1650
to 2100, adolescent fertility, the future of world urbanization, and
education and fertility. Part 2 deals with Portuguese and European
demography. An annex contains a listing of the publications issued
between 1945 and 1987 by the Portuguese Center for Demographic Studies
and the National Institute of Statistics.
Publisher's address:
Avenida Antonio Jose de Almeida 5, 1078 Lisbon Codex,
Portugal.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30009 Coale,
Ansley J. Demographic effects of scientific progress.
In: Papers read at a joint meeting of the Royal Society and the
American Philosophical Society, April 1986, Volume 1. American
Philosophical Society Special Publication, No. 44, ISBN 0-87169-909-5.
LC 86-71783. 1987. 85-95 pp. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In Eng.
The author examines the impact of scientific progress on
demographic trends since the eighteenth century. "The question I
address is whether the unique spurt in the growth in the number of homo
sapiens is the consequence of the sustained growth in science that
began a little earlier. To examine this question we shall consider the
two constituents of population growth (the birth rate and the death
rate) and shall review separately how these rates have evolved in two
subdivisions of the world's total population: the population of areas
now classified by the United Nations as less developed, and of areas
classified as more developed." The author finds that "science had
little direct impact on the reduction of mortality in the more
developed countries by providing more effective medical care until
recently, and by then most of the fall in death rates had occurred; and
science had contributed little in the form of new kinds of
contraception when the initiation of contraception (mostly folk
methods) started the sustained decline in childbearing rates in the
more developed countries. In contrast scientific advances in the
prevention and cure of disease were a major factor in the very rapid
fall of mortality in the l.d.c.'s [less-developed countries]; and
scientific advances in the understanding of reproduction facilitated
recent fertility declines in the l.d.c.'s."
Author's address:
Office of Population Research, 21 Prospect Avenue, Princeton, NJ
08540.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30010 Keyfitz,
Nathan. Five billion people. [Funf Milliarden
Menschen.] Zeitschrift fur Bevolkerungswissenschaft, Vol. 13, No. 1,
1987. 11-28 pp. Wiesbaden, Germany, Federal Republic of. In Ger. with
sum. in Eng; Fre.
The author considers implications of anticipated
global population growth, giving attention to economic conditions, the
environment, education, employment, consumption, developing countries'
trade balances, and economic development. The need for intensive
family planning efforts in developing countries is
stressed.
Author's address: International Institute for Applied
Systems Analysis, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
Location:
Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30011 Loraine, J.
A. The overpopulation syndrome: a fundamental issue in
human ecology. Community Medicine, Vol. 8, No. 4, Nov 1986. 281-5
pp. Oxford, England. In Eng.
"As the world approaches the
twenty-first century it faces a series of problems which are
historically unique and are proving to be exceptionally intractable.
Foremost amongst them are the growth of population, food shortages,
joblessness, environmental pollution and the threat of nuclear war.
These issues intimately affect the future of humanity and have a direct
and mounting influence on medicine. In this paper the global outlook
for population is considered and its relevance to human ecology is
stressed."
Author's address: Department of Community Medicine,
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland.
Location:
U.S. National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD.
53:30012 Wulker,
Gabriele. Time bomb number one: population.
[Zeitbombe Nr. 1: Bevolkerung.] Vierteljahresberichte/Problems of
International Cooperation, No. 105, Sep 1986. 339-46 pp. Bonn, Germany,
Federal Republic of. In Ger. with sum. in Eng; Fre.
The author
presents an overview of the implications of anticipated world
population growth, with a particular focus on the rapid population
growth taking place in developing countries. The limitations of
population policies in controlling this growth are outlined. The
Chinese experience with population control measures is summarized.
Among the factors influencing population growth that are discussed are
family structure, social security systems, religious beliefs, labor
demands, the educational status of women, and economic
resources.
Location: World Bank, Joint Bank-Fund Library,
Washington, D.C.
53:30013 Cerone,
Pietro. On stable population theory with immigration.
Demography, Vol. 24, No. 3, Aug 1987. 431-8 pp. Washington, D.C. In
Eng.
"The paper extends stable population theory to include a
constant stream of immigration. Previous attempts at tackling the
problem have either restricted themselves to a below-replacement native
population or else used an approach that does not produce the values of
all of the parameters explicitly. It is shown that under a constant
stream of immigration, the population will asymptotically tend toward a
constant, linear, or exponential behavior, depending on whether the
fertility behavior is below, equal to, or above replacement level. All
of the parameters are determined in terms of the characteristics of the
population at the origin."
Author's address: Department of
Mathematics and Operations Research, Footscray Institute of Technology,
P.O. Box 64, Footscray, 3011 Victoria, Australia.
Location:
Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30014 de
Oliveira, Francisco. Malthus and Marx: false enchantment
and radical difficulty. [Malthus e Marx: falso encanto e
dificuldade radical.] Texto NEPO, No. 4, Nov 1985. 27 pp. Universidade
Estadual de Campinas, Nucleo de Estudos de Populacao [NEPO]: Campinas,
Brazil. In Por.
The author compares the contributions of Malthus
and Marx to the foundation of the science of demography.
Publisher's
address: Caixa Postal 1170, Campinas SP, Brazil.
Location:
Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30015 Duarte,
Joao C.; Montali, Lilia T.; de Oliveira, Maria C. F. A.; Patarra, Neide
L. Some theoretical-methodological problems with Latin
American population studies. [Alguns problemas
teorico-metodologicos dos estudos de populacao na America Latina.]
Texto NEPO, No. 3, Oct 1985. 42 pp. Universidade Estadual de Campinas,
Nucleo de Estudos de Populacao [NEPO]: Campinas, Brazil. In Por.
This study, originally written in 1978 but not previously
published, is concerned with some theoretical and methodological
problems in the study of population in Latin America. These include
the definition of a population, problems of population measurement, and
the use of the family as a unit in demographic analysis.
Publisher's
address: Caixa Postal 1170, Campinas SP, Brazil.
Location:
Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30016 Hammel, E.
A.; Howell, Nancy. Research in population and culture: an
evolutionary framework. Current Anthropology, Vol. 28, No. 2, Apr
1987. 141-60 pp. Chicago, Illinois. In Eng.
The relevance of
accepted demographic theories to the study of anthropology is first
reviewed, with particular reference to the study of populations in
periods of unrecorded history. The authors propose an alternative
theory "drawing upon a new level of sophistication in anthropological
demography that permits more complexity in the theory itself about
alternative outcomes of stressful points in population history and the
testing of hypotheses in more realistic contexts of continentwide
examinations of populations influencing each other by their expansions
and contractions. We anticipate finding that population fission is a
particularly interesting alternative response to population pressure
when we are dealing with relatively sparse populations and that the
place of the given population, in the core or on the periphery of
population growth centers, is crucial in influencing the alternatives
used." Comments are included by Eliane S. Azevedo, Don E. Dumond, W.
Penn Handwerker, Henry Harpending, Marvin Harris, Ann V. Millard, Kim
A. McBride, Francisco M. Salzano, and John W. Sheets (pp.
150-4).
Author's address: University of California, Berkeley, CA
94720.
Location: Princeton University Library (PR).
53:30017 Khalatbari,
Parviz. The significance of the historical perspective for
the development of the Marxist-Leninist theory of population. [Zur
Bedeutung der historischen Betrachtungsweise fur die Entwicklung der
marxistisch-leninistischen Bevolkerungstheorie.] Jahrbuch fur
Wirtschaftsgeschichte, No. 1, 1984. 37-55 pp. Berlin, German Democratic
Republic. In Ger.
The author presents an overview of individuals
and studies that have shaped Marxist-Leninist demographic thought.
Obstacles to the development of Marxist-Leninist population theory and
methods are identified, and the significance of the historical
perspective for population theory is discussed. Topics considered
include the continuity of population development, the significance of
uncontrolled mortality and morbidity prior to the industrial
revolution, and the demographic impact of subsequent developments in
mortality control.
Location: Princeton University Library
(SPR).
53:30018 Patarra,
Neide L.; Ferreira, Carlos E. C. Rethinking the
demographic transition: formulations, critiques, and perspectives of
analysis. [Repensando a transicao demografica: formulacoes,
criticas e perspectivas de analise.] Texto NEPO, No. 10, Oct 1986. 37
pp. Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Nucleo de Estudos de Populacao
[NEPO]: Campinas, Brazil. In Por. with sum. in Eng.
The theoretical
concept of the demographic transition is first outlined, and recent
literature on the topic is reviewed. Consideration is then given to
the contribution of social historians as well as demographers. The main
focus is on the relevance of the concept to demographic trends in
contemporary market-economy developing countries.
Publisher's
address: Caixa Postal 1170, Campinas SP, Brazil.
Location:
Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30019 Pavlik,
Zdenek; Kuchar, Ivan. Concerning the optimum population
for Czechoslovakia: theoretical and methodological problems. [K
populacnimu optimu Ceskoslovenska (teoreticko-metodologicke problemy).]
Politicka Ekonomie, Vol. 34, No. 3, 1986. 259-78 pp. Prague,
Czechoslovakia. In Cze. with sum. in Eng; Rus.
Some issues
concerning the determination of an optimum population for
Czechoslovakia are discussed, and their implications for the
development of appropriate population policies are considered. The
authors suggest that population policies should be developed primarily
in response to population trends rather than to influence those trends.
The focus of the study is on the factors to be considered when
developing the concept of an optimum population, rather than on
actually calculating optimum population size.
Location:
Princeton University Library (FST).
53:30020 Rashid,
Salim. Malthus's Essay on Population: the facts of
"super-growth" and the rhetoric of scientific persuasion. Journal
of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 23, No. 1, Jan 1987.
22-36 pp. Brandon, Vermont. In Eng.
The author presents a critique
of Malthus's population theories. "For the Malthusian theory of
population to be accepted as 'scientific,' it was essential that the
theory be established on wide empirical evidence. A close examination
of the 'facts' provided by Malthus, however, shows that many of his
crucial facts are based on distortions of the available evidence.
Malthus was probably aware of much of this weakness, but for rhetorical
reasons he persisted with the sandy empirical foundations from which he
began."
Author's address: Department of Economics, University of
Illinois, Urbana, IL 61820.
Location: Columbia University
Libraries, New York, NY.
53:30021 Schmid,
Josef. Population as a factor of cultural evolution.
[Bevolkerung als Faktor kultureller Evolution.] Zeitschrift fur
Bevolkerungswissenschaft, Vol. 13, No. 1, 1987. 29-52 pp. Wiesbaden,
Germany, Federal Republic of. In Ger. with sum. in Eng; Fre.
The
author discusses the concepts put forth by Ester Boserup, using
illustrations from sub-Saharan Africa. "According to Boserup each
cultural epoch, each technological level is characterized by the size
and density of population on the one hand, and the ecology (climate,
vegetation, topography) on the other. Demographic pressure is the
starting-point for changing the production mode and improving
technology. During an extended period of personal frictions and
sub-productivity a new production mode is developed. Once established
the new cultural and economic level permits further population growth."
The particular influence of the traditional role of women in African
society is discussed.
Author's address: Universitat Bamberg,
Lehrstuhl fur Bevolkerungswissenschaft, Hornthalstrasse 2, 8600
Bamberg, Federal Republic of Germany.
Location: Princeton
University Library (SPR).
53:30022 Silber,
Jacques. Malthus' preconditions to moral restraint and
modern population economics. Genus, Vol. 42, No. 3-4, Jul-Dec
1986. 13-21 pp. Rome, Italy. In Eng. with sum. in Fre; Ita.
The
author examines the writings of Malthus and compares them with basic
tenets of two modern economic approaches to fertility studies. It is
suggested that "Leibenstein and Easterlin, on the one hand, base their
arguments on the central role of aspirations and of relative income or
status, whether it be that of the parents or of the friends and
neighbors. We argue that aspirations and relative income effects are
quite close to Malthus' ideas on 'forward looking' and self respect.
The other modern economic approach to fertility studies, the Chicago
school, is centered on the effect of human capital on consumption and
fertility decisions, and we think that this idea was not too strange to
Malthus when he emphasized foresight and the desire for
knowledge."
Author's address: Bar Ilan University, Ramat-Gan,
Israel.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30023 von
Zameck-Glyscinski, Walburga. Neoclassical population
economics. [Neoklassische Bevolkerungsokonomik.]
Volkswirtschaftliche Forschung und Entwicklung, Vol. 18, ISBN
3-88259-359-8. 1985. 406 pp. V. Florentz: Munich, Germany, Federal
Republic of. In Ger.
This book deals with economic theories of
population and, in particular, economic models of fertility. An
attempt is made to use Kuhn's concept of a disciplinary matrix to shed
some light on neoclassical economic theories and on the structure of
fertility models. The theoretical models are then evaluated against
empirical findings for both developed and developing
countries.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30024 Howell,
Nancy. Demographic anthropology. Annual Review of
Anthropology, Vol. 15, 1986. 219-46 pp. Palo Alto, California. In Eng.
Trends in demographic anthropology since 1970 are reviewed with
emphasis on the literature published since 1980 and on publications in
English, primarily those from the United States. Consideration is
first given to methodological issues. Topics covered include primate
population and social organization, paleo-demography, the origins of
agriculture, and diet in relation to population structure. The author
also discusses theoretical aspects of the contribution of demographic
anthropology to biology, culture and the study of social structure. An
unannotated bibliography is included.
Location: Princeton
University Library (DR).
53:30025 Lamur, H.
E. The long march of anthropologists to demography.
[De lange mars van antropologen naar de demografie.] ISBN
90-71129-05-5. 1987. 32 pp. Luna Uitgeverij: Amsterdam, Netherlands. In
Dut.
The growing awareness among anthropologists of the importance
of demographic factors in anthropological studies and of the value of
demographic methods is described in this paper, which is the text of an
inaugural speech by the author on accepting a professorship in cultural
anthropology. The focus is on developments since the
1950s.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30026 Trebici,
Vladimir. Demography and ethnography: a multidisciplinary
approach to population. [Demografie si etnografie: pentru o
abordare multidisciplinara a populatiei.] Viitorul Social, Jan-Feb
1987. 44-52 pp. Bucharest, Romania. In Rum.
The author proposes a
multidisciplinary approach to the study of demography. He suggests
that concepts such as reproduction, marriage, and migration cannot be
understood without using the skills and tools developed in a range of
disciplines, including sociology, social psychology, economics,
cultural anthropology, history, and ethnology. The general geographic
focus is on Romania.
Location: Princeton University Library
(SPR).
53:30027 Chandna, R.
C. A geography of population: concepts, determinants and
patterns. 1986. xi, 243 pp. Kalyani: New Delhi, India. In Eng.
This textbook focuses on the concepts and methods central to the
study of population geography. Attention is given to the historical
development of the field, basic sources of data, population
distribution and density, population dynamics, migration, population
characteristics, literacy, urbanization, population theory, and
population policies. Most of the data used to illustrate the concepts
concern India. An index of authors whose works are cited in the text
is included.
Publisher's address: 4863/2B Bharat Ram Road, 24
Daryaganj, New Delhi 110 002, India.
Location: Princeton
University Library (SPR).
53:30028
Drakakis-Smith, David. The third world city.
Methuen Introductions to Development, ISBN 0-416-91970-7. LC 86-21824.
1987. vi, 116 pp. Methuen: New York, New York/London, England. In Eng.
This textbook for introductory courses is concerned with
urbanization in developing countries. It includes chapters on the
historical perspective, demographic aspects, poverty and politics,
employment, and social problems.
Location: New York Public
Library.
53:30029 Findlay,
Allan; Findlay, Anne. Population and development in the
third world. Methuen Introductions to Development, ISBN
0-416-91950-2. LC 86-31094. 1987. xii, 84 pp. Methuen: New York, New
York/London, England. In Eng.
This textbook for introductory
courses is concerned with the relationship between population and
development in developing countries. Chapters are included on
population growth, mortality and fertility, the demographic transition,
food resources, migration and employment, and population planning and
family planning programs.
Location: New York Public
Library.
53:30030 Kozlova, L.
L. Population censuses. [Perepisi naseleniya.] LC
85-118579. 1984. 73 pp. Ministerstvo Vysshego i Srednego Spetsial'nogo
Obrazovaniya SSSR, Moskovskii Ordena Trudovogo Krasnogo Znameni,
Ekonomiko-Statisticheskii: Moscow, USSR. In Rus.
This is a basic
Russian textbook on population censuses. It includes descriptions of
how population censuses are carried out around the world, their
history, programs, and organization. The examples given include
Scandinavian countries, the United Kingdom, and the United
States.
Location: U.S. Library of Congress, Washington,
D.C.
53:30031 Menard,
Scott W.; Moen, Elizabeth W. Perspectives on population:
an introduction to concepts and issues. ISBN 0-19-504092-9. LC
86-23652. 1987. xix, 487 pp. Oxford University Press: New York, New
York/Oxford, England. In Eng.
"This reader is intended as a
textbook to be used in undergraduate or graduate courses [in
demography] either alone, as a supplement to a standard population
text, or in conjunction with one or more supplementary paperback texts.
In addition, it is designed to be a sourcebook for professionals in
the field of population." The book consists of a selection of
previously published items organized under the subject headings
population growth and decline in history; population theory and policy:
poverty, pollution, resources, and development; mortality; fertility;
population location: migration, distribution, urbanization, and
density; population structure; and population
research.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30032 Siampos,
Georgiou S. Demography. [Demografia.] 3rd ed. 1986.
459 pp. Ekdoseis Smpilias to Oikonomiko: Athens, Greece. In Gre.
This is the third edition of a basic demographic textbook for
university students; the geographic focus is on Greece. The first part
is concerned with data collection, including censuses, vital
statistics, migration statistics, sample surveys, and population
registers. The second part deals with data quality and methods of data
anlysis. Topics covered include spatial distribution, migration,
urbanization, population characteristics, population growth, fertility,
mortality, life tables, economic activity, causes of death, the
demographic transition, nuptiality, and population projections. An
analysis of population trends in Greece since World War II is included,
as well as an English-Greek glossary of demographic
terms.
Publisher's address: 1 Cotsika Street, Athens,
Greece.
For the 2nd edition, published in 1983, see 50:40023.
Location: Princeton University Library (SPR).
53:30033 Unesco.
Regional Office for Education in Asia and the Pacific. Population
Education Programme Service (Bangkok, Thailand). Manual
for repackaging of information on population education. 1986. 94
pp. Bangkok, Thailand. In Eng.
This manual is concerned with the
repackaging of information for use in population education programs in
Asia and Oceania. Part 1 describes how material for repackaging is
selected and why. Part 2 is concerned with the identification of the
audience for information. Part 3 is devoted to the different
strategies for repackaging population education information for special
audiences.
Publisher's address: P.O. Box 1425, General Post Office,
Bangkok 10500, Thailand.
Location: Princeton University
Library (SPR).