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Baby bonus signals sea-change in family policy
"A funny thing happened along the way to the Federal Election - commentators began to wake up to what is arguably the most pressing social and economic problem facing Australia. When John Howard announced his innovative, though modest, incentive for mothers to stay home with their first-born baby - and virtually no one slated him for "wanting to keep women in the home" - it marked a possible turning point in the debate on family policy." [Australia News Weekly]
www.newsweekly.com.au
Slow Death in the Great Plains
"A sizable swathe of the country's heartland is undergoing a severe drop in births that, if it continues, could empty many small towns in just one generation." [Atlantic Monthly] (July 1, 1997)
www.theatlantic.com
Russia's Modest Migration Gains Unlikely to Stop Population Decline
Discusses some of the issues surrounding the population fall in Russia. [Population Today] (May 1, 2001)
www.prb.org
Low Fertility Not Politically Sustainable
While for many countries concerns about high birth rates persist, for many other countries the problem now is very low rates of birth. [Population Today]
www.prb.org
The old assumptions about world population trends need to be rethought. One thing is clear, in the next century the world is in for some rapid downsizing [Atlantic Monthly]
www.theatlantic.com
Falling fertility debate reignited
"One issue most of the main players in the debate can agree on is the decline in Australian - and Western - fertility rates. There is agreement not only that the decline exists, but that it represents a major problem in need of urgent correction." [News Weekly Australia]
www.newsweekly.com.au
"The remarkable particulars of today's global march toward smaller family size fly in the face of many prevailing assumptions about when rapid fertility decline can, and cannot, occur."[Australia News Weekly]
www.newsweekly.com.au
"The Japanese island of Oshima is giving us an inkling of what the future may be like. Children are so rare that an old people's home set up dummies of a little boy ... Many schools are empty as there are so few children. As people die, houses are abandoned. Twenty years ago, one village had 500 people; now there are 230; in another twenty years there might be none. ... According to the reporter, "what has happened here will also happen, to one degree or another, throughout Japan - and in many other developed countries."
www.enterstageright.com
Burying The Big Population Story
"And here's the overwhelming demographic story of our time: Never have birth and fertility rates fallen so far, so fast, so low, for so long, all over the world, yielding populations in decline. That story was buried by the noise of "the population explosion," a powerful trend that peaked decades ago, but which is still promoted by environmental alarmists and their allies in the United Nations." [Jewish World Review]
www.jewishworldreview.com
"If Italy's fertility will remain at the same level for thirty to forty years, the Italian population will be reduced by one-third."
www.pbs.org
Buchanan: Western Civilization Is on the Way Out
"Western civilization is committing suicide. But you are not supposed to realize it. Not until it's too late to do something to reverse the tide." [NewsMax]
www.newsmax.com
Failure to Control Borders Causes 'Death of the West'
"WASHINGTON - "In America, the places prepared for the forty million unborn lost since Roe v. Wade have been filled by the grateful poor of Asia, Africa, and Latin America.""
www.newsmax.com
'Death of the West': Where Have All the Children Gone?
"By 2050, it is calculated that the United States will have the dubious honor of being the first Western nation to turn its dominant culture into a minority. Bill Clinton has hailed this as a good thing." [NewsMax]
www.newsmax.com
Discussion of the ramification of the book "Death of the West" [NewsMax]
www.newsmax.com
Discussion with Pat Buchanan on "Death of the West". [WorldNetDaily]
www.worldnetdaily.com