In sociology, “development” is best understood as a process that mainly involves A Only income rise B Only industrial output
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Chapter 14: Population Theories and Population Growth (Set-5)
Malthus’ “preventive checks” reduce population growth mainly by changing A Death rates quickly B Migration direction only C Fertility behavior
Continue readingChapter 14: Population Theories and Population Growth (Set-4)
Malthus argued that population is kept in balance mainly by A Trade expansion only B Automatic wage rise C Checks
Continue readingChapter 14: Population Theories and Population Growth (Set-3)
Malthus used which term for limiting births through delayed marriage and self-control A Positive checks B Natural selection C Preventive
Continue readingChapter 14: Population Theories and Population Growth (Set-2)
In Malthus’ view, population pressure occurs mainly when A Food grows faster B People grow faster C Land grows faster
Continue readingChapter 14: Population Theories and Population Growth (Set-1)
Malthus explained population increase mainly through which pattern A Geometric growth rate B Linear growth rate C Random growth pattern
Continue readingChapter 13: Social Demography (Set-5)
A key limitation of crude birth rate for comparing fertility across regions is that it depends heavily on A Weather
Continue readingChapter 13: Social Demography (Set-4)
Social demography explains population trends by connecting them mainly with A Ocean currents B Rock formation C Social conditions D
Continue readingChapter 13: Social Demography (Set-3)
In social demography, the population is usually analyzed as groups based on A Forest cover B River systems C Age–sex
Continue readingChapter 13: Social Demography (Set-2)
Social demography differs from demography mainly because it focuses more on A Cell biology B Rock layers C Weather patterns
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