炎热和干旱减少了全球热带地区的次国家人口增长

IF 3.2 3区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Population and Environment Pub Date : 2023-06-01 Epub Date: 2023-04-24 DOI:10.1007/s11111-023-00420-9
Clark Gray, Maia Call
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近几十年来,气候变化可能会通过迁徙、死亡或生育率下降导致全球热带地区脆弱地区的人口减少,这引起了人们的极大关注。我们通过使用来自全球热带地区1809个次国家单位的次国家人口增长数据和气候暴露相关数据来研究年代际温度和降水异常如何影响人口加权普查间增长率,从而解决了这一问题。我们的固定效应回归分析表明,在炎热和干燥的条件下,预测的人口增长率最低。热和干旱的影响在基线上具有高人口密度、高降水率或高教育程度的地区最为强烈。这些模式与这些过程的常见假设相反,甚至罕见的干热条件组合(发生在我们样本的不到7%)也不会导致当地人口减少。结合之前的研究结果,这表明人口减少的说法没有强有力的证据基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Heat and Drought Reduce Subnational Population Growth in the Global Tropics.

Heat and Drought Reduce Subnational Population Growth in the Global Tropics.

In recent decades, the possibility that climate change will lead to depopulation of vulnerable areas in the global tropics via migration, mortality, or collapsing fertility has generated significant concern. We address this issue by using data on subnational population growth from 1,809 subnational units across the global tropics and linked data on climate exposures to examine how decadal temperature and precipitation anomalies influence population-weighted intercensal growth rates. Our fixed effects regression analysis reveals that the lowest predicted population growth rates occur under hot and dry conditions. The effects of heat and drought are strongest in districts that, at baseline, have high population densities, high precipitation rates, or high educational attainment. These patterns are contrary to common assumptions about these processes, and even the rare combination of hot and dry conditions, occurring in less than 7% of our sample, does not lead to local depopulation. Taken together with previous findings, this suggests that depopulation narratives do not have a strong evidentiary basis.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
6.10%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Population & Environment is the sole social science journal focused on interdisciplinary research on social demographic aspects of environmental issues. The journal publishes cutting-edge research that contributes new insights on the complex, reciprocal links between human populations and the natural environment in all regions and countries of the world. Quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods contributions are welcome. Disciplines commonly represented in the journal include demography, geography, sociology, human ecology, environmental economics, public health, anthropology and environmental studies. The journal publishes original research, research brief, and review articles.
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