ENGAGE Snapshot: Fertility and Economic Growth Around the World
Though often overlooked, there is an important relationship between fertility and economic growth that has been demonstrated in countries around the world.
Though often overlooked, there is an important relationship between fertility and economic growth that has been demonstrated in countries around the world.
(2002) Except at the very oldest ages, black Americans have the highest death rates of any of America's racial and ethnic groups.
(2013) Christelle Kwizera is an activist from Rwanda majoring in mechanical engineering at Oklahoma Christian University. She is also the chief creative officer of Isaro Foundation, a nonprofit she helped to found that seeks to promote the culture of reading and writing in Rwanda; and head of the U.S.
Big data has opened a new world for demographers and public health scientists to explore. But is analyzing big data practical and affordable?
Project: KIDS COUNT
(2010) According to data released by the Annie E. Casey Foundation in its annual KIDS COUNT Data Book, overall improvements in child well-being that began in the late 1990s stalled in the years just before the current economic downturn.
(2010) A recent survey found that young Americans ages 18 to 29 have nearly universal acceptance of interracial dating and marriage within their own families.
(2008) Fertility has declined significantly throughout the developing world, and in Latin America total fertility rates (TFRs) have declined by 50 percent over the last three decades, from 5.0 births per woman in 1970 to only 2.5 today.1