4.2 Review

Demographic perspectives in research on global environmental change

Journal

POPULATION STUDIES-A JOURNAL OF DEMOGRAPHY
Volume 75, Issue -, Pages S77-S104

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00324728.2021.1988684

Keywords

climate change; emissions; environment; population composition; population distribution; population projections; scenarios; vulnerability

Categories

Funding

  1. IIASA
  2. National Member Organizations

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The human population plays a central role in research on global environmental change, with population dynamics influencing the environment and climate system through carbon emissions and climate change impacting population health and well-being. Demographic research has advanced understanding of how population size, composition, and distribution influence global environmental change, urging for adjustments in population projections to account for climate feedback. This area of new research requires expertise in population science and contributions from demographers.
The human population is at the centre of research on global environmental change. On the one hand, population dynamics influence the environment and the global climate system through consumption-based carbon emissions. On the other hand, the health and well-being of the population are already being affected by climate change. A knowledge of population dynamics and population heterogeneity is thus fundamental to improving our understanding of how population size, composition, and distribution influence global environmental change and how these changes affect population subgroups differentially by demographic characteristics and spatial distribution. The increasing relevance of demographic research on the topic, coupled with availability of theoretical concepts and advancement in data and computing facilities, has contributed to growing engagement of demographers in this field. In the past 25 years, demographic research has enriched climate change research-with the key contribution being in moving beyond the narrow view that population matters only in terms of population size-by putting a greater emphasis on population composition and distribution, through presenting both empirical evidence and advanced population forecasting to account for demographic and spatial heterogeneity. What remains missing in the literature is research that investigates how global environmental change affects current and future demographic processes and, consequently, population trends. If global environmental change does influence fertility, mortality, and migration, then population estimates and forecasts need to adjust for climate feedback in population projections. Indisputably, this is the area of new research that directly requires expertise in population science and contribution from demographers.

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