Volume 1, Issue 3

Summer 2009


 The third issue of the EJSD looks at "The Population Bomb Four Decades On."

On World Population Day - Saturday, July 11 - the EJSD publishes a critical evaluation of theories and evidence relating to the impact of a burgeoning human population.

 

Volume 1, Issue 3: The Population Bomb Four Decades On


Jul 2009 - Economics, Philosophy, Politics, Science

Featured Story

LAND CONFLICT AND GENOCIDE IN RWANDA

By Karol Boudreaux

In his 2005 best-selling book Collapse, Jared Diamond argues that some societies “choose to fail or succeed.”  Diamond contends that when populations rise, some societies overuse resources which, in turn, leads to environmental degradation and, ultimately, social collapse.  One of the cases he explores in his book is the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, which he calls a modern day Malthusian crisis.  However, the arguments he employs to explain why Rwandan society was unable to peacefully and effectively manage rising population pressures overlook a host of political factors that limited the ability of people to respond to increased competition for land in pre-genocide Rwanda.  In particular, by focusing on land-related conflict Diamond overlooks factors that kept Rwandans on rural land:  lack of a formal land market that would allow people to sell land and move to more urbanized areas, government policies that limited the movement of citizens from the countryside to urban centers, tightly controlled markets that limited entrepreneurial opportunities for people who might wish to leave farms, and a general pro-rural ideology imposed by the pre-genocide Habyarinama government.   Unlike citizens in many other densely populated countries such as Belgium, Hong Kong, and Singapore, Rwandans had only limited freedom to deal with rising population pressures.  While land conflict was an important feature of pre-genocide Rwanda it was not the primary impetus for violence and genocide.  A more nuanced interpretation of Rwanda’s genocide would see that government policies that limited land sales, freedom of movement and labor opportunities contributed in important ways to discontent among Rwandans.   


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Volume 1, Issue 3: The Population Bomb Four Decades On

Download the pdf (2235.0K) of the entire issue.

EDITORIALS

THE PERSISTENCE OF POPULATION PESSIMISM

By Julian Morris

HTML || pdf (172.1K)

PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES

HAVE INCREASES IN POPULATION, AFFLUENCE AND TECHNOLOGY WORSENED HUMAN AND ENVIRONMENTAL WELL-BEING?

By Indur M. Goklany

HTML || pdf (1085.2K) || abstract

JULIAN SIMON AND THE "LIMITS TO GROWTH" NEO-MALTHUSIANISM

By Paul Dragos Aligica

HTML || pdf (258.7K) || abstract

LAND CONFLICT AND GENOCIDE IN RWANDA

By Karol Boudreaux

HTML || pdf (283.1K) || abstract

POPULATION GROWTH AND CITIES

By Randal O'Toole

HTML || pdf (228.9K) || abstract

POPULATION GROWTH, INCREASES IN AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AND TRENDS IN FOOD PRICES

By Douglas Southgate

HTML || pdf (207.1K) || abstract

THE POPULATION BOMB REVISITED

By Anne Ehrlich, Paul Ehrlich

HTML || pdf (234.2K) || abstract

THE POST WAR INTELLECTUAL ROOTS OF THE POPULATION BOMB - FAIRFIELD OSBORN'S 'OUR PLUNDERED PLANET' AND WILLIAM VOGT'S 'ROAD TO SURVIVAL' IN RETROSPECT

By Pierre Desrochers, Christine Hoffbauer

HTML || pdf (1006.6K) || abstract

BOOK REVIEWS

REVIEW OF BLUE PLANET IN GREEN SHACKLES

By Peter Gordon

HTML || pdf (75.4K)

REVIEW OF CREATING A WORLD WITHOUT POVERTY

By Per Bylund, Mario Mondelli

HTML || pdf (101.6K)

REVIEW OF FAILED STATES

By Chris Coyne

HTML || pdf (123.4K)

REVIEW OF FATAL MISCONCEPTION

By Heli Kasanen

HTML || pdf (113.6K)

REVIEW OF GREENER PASTURES

By Glenn Fox

HTML || pdf (170.0K)

REVIEW OF SEX, SCIENCE & PROFITS

By Pierre Desrochers

HTML || pdf (114.8K)

REVIEW OF STARVED FOR SCIENCE

By John H. Sanders

HTML || pdf (101.1K)

REVIEW OF THE DOMINANT ANIMAL

By Matt Ridley

HTML || pdf (92.0K)