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Health Policy Plus (HP+)

PRB is a partner on the Palladium-led, USAID-funded Health Policy Plus (HP+) project that strengthens and advances health policy priorities at global, national, and subnational levels.

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Project: PACE: Policy, Advocacy, and Communication Enhanced for Population and Reproductive Health

2016 World Population Data Sheet

The world population will reach 9.9 billion in 2050, up 33 percent from an estimated 7.4 billion now, according to projections included in the 2016 World Population Data Sheet from the Population Reference Bureau (PRB).

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Project: Demographic Forecasting Services—AMBAG

Baby Boomers and Millennials Boost Population in Parts of Rural America

Two demographic groups—young adults ages 20 to 34 and older adults ages 65 and older—are reshaping the population in rural America.

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Rethinking Power and Partnership in the SRHR Sector: Lessons From the TIME Initiative

The TIME Initiative sparked a conversation that must continue—not only inside our organizations, but also in our partner countries.

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Project: Center for Public Information on Population Research (CPIPR)

Childhood Trauma Has Lifelong Health Consequences for Women

Women who experienced childhood adversity are more likely to have their first child early or outside of marriage, face a greater risk of cancer than men, and are particularly vulnerable to health impacts when they are lower income.

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Five Generations at Work: A PRB Book Talk Q&A With Author Patrick Dunne

In the book Five Generations at Work: How We Win Together, for Good, authors Patrick Dunne and Rebecca Robins describe how we’re living in a time of unprecedented demographic change, where five generations work alongside each other in an ideologically and politically fractured environment.

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Will Rising Childhood Obesity Decrease U.S. Life Expectancy?

(2005) A new study contends that rising childhood obesity rates will cut average U.S. life expectancy from birth by two to five years in the coming decades—a magnitude of decline last seen in the United States during the Great Depression.

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Population: A Lively Introduction

(2007)When where you born? How many brothers and sisters did you have? Where did your ancestors live? How long will you live?

View Details Array ( [ID] => 25929 [id] => 25929 [title] => 62.1LivelyIntroduction [filename] => 62.1LivelyIntroduction.pdf [filesize] => 570168 [url] => https://www.prb.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/62.1LivelyIntroduction.pdf [link] => https://www.prb.org/resources/population-a-lively-introduction/62-1livelyintroduction/ [alt] => [author] => 15 [description] => [caption] => [name] => 62-1livelyintroduction [status] => inherit [uploaded_to] => 6935 [date] => 2007-03-01 00:00:00 [modified] => 2021-05-18 14:09:03 [menu_order] => 0 [mime_type] => application/pdf [type] => application [subtype] => pdf [icon] => https://www.prb.org/wp-includes/images/media/document.png ) Download (0.6 MB)

The Dynamics of Family Planning: Key Demographic Insights

Since the early 1960s, many countries have instituted large-scale programs to provide contraceptive access and services to their populations.

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U.S. Population Could Reach 438 Million by 2050, and Immigration Is Key

(2008) A new report from the Pew Research Center projects that immigration will propel the U.S. population total to 438 million by 2050, from 303 million today (see Figure 1). Along with this growth, the racial and ethnic profile of Americans will continue to shift—with non-Hispanic whites losing their majority status.

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