1st Edition

Demographic Methods

By Andrew Hinde Copyright 1998

    Demography is the study of population structure and change. As modern society becomes ever more complex, it becomes increasingly important to be able to measure accurately all aspects of change in the population, and estimate what its future size and composition might be. This book describes and explains the methods demographers use to analyse population data.



    Looking at mortality and fertility, population dynamics and population projection, nuptiality and migration, Hinde demonstrates that most demographic methods are applications of certain fundamental principles. This book covers material taught in introductory courses in population analysis, while also including more advanced topics such as parity progression ratios, survival analysis and birth interval analysis. Most chapters are followed by a range of exercises, and a comprehensive set of solutions to these exercises is provided at the end of the book. Quattro and Excel spreadsheet files containing data for all the numerical exercises, plus some additional files of data from recent census and surveys, are available via the Internet.

    Some demographic fundamentals
    The measurement of mortality
    Comparing mortality experiences
    The life table
    Multiple decrement life tables
    Survival analysis
    The analysis of marriage
    The measurement of fertility
    Parity progression
    The determinants of fertility
    Birth interval analysis
    Population growth
    Models of population structure
    Applications of stable population theory
    The analysis of migration
    Introduction to population projection
    The component method of population projection
    Population projection and population dynamics
    Bibliography.

    Biography

    Andrew Hinde