Lecture: 4 hrs/week
Or
Hybrid Format: 2 hrs/week in class with 2 hrs/week online
The course will employ a variety of instructional methods to accomplish its objectives, including some of the following: lecture, labs, field work, DVDs/videos and animations, individual and/or team projects, small group discussion, and map and graph analysis. Where the course is offered in a hybrid format, students will complete over 50% of the course material online and outside of the classroom in a self-directed manner.
- Introduction to the field of population geography
- Applications of demography to geography
- Demographic theories
- Demographic tools
- Demographic data and information
- Methods in population research; qualitative and quantitative
- Accessing Statistics Canada and United Nations data
- Using maps and graphs to represent population data
- Global population change
- Global population growth in the 19th and 20th Centuries
- Demographic Transition theories
- Impacts of contemporary globalization
- Population-environment correlations and causations
- Understanding demographic characteristics
- Fertility
- Mortality
- Population distribution & using maps
- Population characteristics (age, class, race, sex, language)
- Aging populations and dependency ratios
- Migration
- The movement of people
- Internal migration
- International migration
- Refugees and other displacements
- Urbanization
- Competing theories on population growth and the future
- Un/linking economic development, food scarcity, resource supplies, and population
- Malthus and the Pessimists
- Cornucopians and the benefits of scarcity
- Neutralist critiques of economic globalization and consumerism
- Population policies and family planning
- Un/linking economic development, food scarcity, resource supplies, and population
- What will the future hold?
- Strengths and weaknesses of population data and theories
- Review and conclusions
At the conclusion of the course, the successful student will be able to:
- Synthesize concepts and techniques in population geography.
- Critically assess contemporary trends in population geographies at local, regional, and global levels.
- Apply demographic theories to emerging geographic issues.
- Communicate orally and in writing about population geography foundations.
- Use both qualitative and quantitative methods to analyze population trends.
- Discuss the multiple perspectives on controversial population debates.
- Interpret and utilize population maps, graphs, and charts.
The evaluation will be based on course objectives and be carried out in accordance with Douglas College policy. The instructor will provide a written syllabus outlining course objectives and evaluation specifications during the first week of class.
An example of an evaluation scheme follows:
Attendance & participation | 10% |
Course project/essay | 20% |
Map and graph analysis | 15% |
Midterm exam | 25% |
Final exam | 30% |
Total | 100% |
Examples of textbooks to be used and periodically updated are:
- Newbold, K.B. (2017). Population Geography: Tools and Issues. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.
- Trovato, F. (2015). Canada's Population in a Global Context: An Introduction to Social Demography. Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press Canada.
- Holdsworth, C., Finney, N., Marshall, A., Norman, P. (2013). Population and Society. London: Sage Publications Ltd.
An instructor’s course reader may be required.
GEOG 2212 or 2213 or permission of the instructor.
Courses listed here must be completed either prior to or simultaneously with this course:
- No corequisite courses
Courses listed here are equivalent to this course and cannot be taken for further credit:
- No equivalency courses