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Prologue

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Handbook of Population

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Abstract

The field of demography has evolved significantly since the 1950s. The first compendium of the discipline of demography was the landmark volume, The Study of Population: An Inventory and Appraisal, by Philip M. Hauser and Otis Dudley Duncan, first published in 1959. The Study of Population is a useful benchmark for gauging the nature and extent of change in the field of demography in the six decades since its publication. The chapters contained in that volume were grouped into four sections. Part I, Demography as a Science, contained four chapters laying out the substantive, methodological, epistemological, and organizational foundations of the discipline (Hauser and Duncan 1959a, b, c, d). Part II, Developmentand Current Status of Demography, offered eight chapters portraying the origins and practice of demography in selected nations, along with an insightful overview of disciplinary history (Lorimer 1959). Part III, Elements of Demography, included a dozen chapters covering the demographic equation, the structure and components of change, as well as assessments of demographic data. Finally, Part IV, Population Studies in Various Disciplines, contained seven chapters discussing common interests of demography and selected disciplines, including sociology (Moore 1959), economics (Spengler 1959), and human ecology (Duncan 1959).

In 2004, Michael Micklin and I wrote a Prologue to the 1st edition of the Handbook of Population that was then published in 2005. When I began putting together this 2nd edition of the Handbook in the Spring of 2017, Mike started in the latter months of the year to begin updating and revising the Prologue. But then he passed away in February of 2018, having just begun his revision. He was very ill the last few months of his life, but he did his best to work on the revision. I have used the changes that he introduced, in my rewriting of the Prologue, and I have retained Mike as a coauthor. A lot of him remains in this important statement about the progress of demography. Michael will certainly be missed. He was a true friend and a superb demographer and human ecologist.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Some definitions of demography are narrower and do not include social mobility as one of the demographic processes.

  2. 2.

    The resources listed in this Prologue are important for the operation of most, if not all, disciplines, but they do not exhaust the class of resources that might be mentioned.

  3. 3.

    Dudley Kirk (1960: 309) wrote almost 60 years ago that “the study of population is at once a body of data, a methodology, and a bundle of generalizations concerning the causes and consequences of demographic phenomena.”

  4. 4.

    Note, however, that there is no real consensus about the adequacy of fertility theory. See, for example, Stolnitz 1983; Mason 1997; Hirschman 1994; Szreter 1993; van de Kaa 1996; and especially the reflections of Morgan and Rybinska in Chap. 12 of this 2nd edition of the Handbook.

  5. 5.

    This discussion is taken from Mertens (1994).

  6. 6.

    Information about the PAA is provided on the organization’s Website.

  7. 7.

    Information about the EAPS is provided on the organization’s Website.

  8. 8.

    Information about the SDA is provided on the organization’s Website.

  9. 9.

    Information about PRB is provided at the organization’s Website.

  10. 10.

    Information about the Population Council is provided at the organization’s Website.

  11. 11.

    Information about the IPPF is provided at the organization’s Website.

  12. 12.

    Information about AGI is provided at the organization’s Website.

  13. 13.

    The figure in parentheses is the year of initial publication. The Population Index was known as Population Literature until 1937.

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Poston, D.L., Micklin, M. (2019). Prologue. In: Poston, D.L. (eds) Handbook of Population. Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-10910-3_1

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