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A Few Worbs ON GLOBAL OVERPOPULATION 175 having children must not be deliberated from a social or ecological position alone, removed from where it primarily belongs: from among the most personal decisions of families, couples, women. Whether we have children or not, whether we have one or half a dozen, let us leave the worries over demographic implications to the statisticians, researchers and politicians, and let us serve the common cause of humankind by consciously preparing for the changes and teaching our children in that spirit. Recommended readings Haggett, Peter 2001. Geography: A Global Synthesis. 4th edition. Harlow, Pearson Hall. [New York, Harper & Row, 1983.] The first edition of the textbook used widely in higher education appeared in 1972. Demographic geography cannot remain absent from an overview of geography. In part 6 (Population Dynamics), the reader is briefly informed of the changes in the number of people, of the demographic transition and current trends. Further chapters contain information about the issues of the correlation between environmental resources and the ecosystem. Meadows, D. H. — Meadows, D. L. — Randers, J. — Behrens III, W. W. 1972. The Limits of Growth. A Report for The Club of Rome’s Project on the Predicament of Mankind. New York, Universe Books. The limits to growth has been an essential work for people wishing to engross themselves in the problem of overpopulation and remains so to this day. The computer simulation, a revolutionary innovation in those days, predicted a frightening future for humankind, a real Malthusian disaster with exhausted energy resources, deprecated soil and eventually a collapsing global population. Since its appearance, it has been strongly criticized for its methodology and conclusions, yet it opened a door to a discourse on sustainable development and impressed upon academia the hazards of overpopulation. In this sense, it may be one of the most important writings of the 20th century. Bibliography Adam, David 2021. “How far will the global population rise? Researchers can’t agree”. Nature, 597: 462-465. https: //doi.org/10.1038/D41586-021-02522-6 Atoyan, Ruben — Christiansen, Lone — Dizioli, Allan — Ebeke, Christian — Ilahi, Nadeem —Ilyina, Anna — Mehrez, Gil - Qu, Haonan — Raei, Faezeh Raei — Rhee, Alaina — Zakharova, Daria 2016. Emigration and its economic impact on Eastern Europe. [Washington, D.C.], International Monetary Fund. Caldwell, John C. — Schindlmayr, Thomas 2010. “Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities”. Population Studies, 573: 241-263. https://doi.org/10.1080/0032472032000137790 Coale, Anslaey J. 1989. Demographic Transition. In Eatwell, John — Milgate, Murray — Newman, Peter (eds.). Social Economics. London, Palgrave Macmillan, 16-23. https:// doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19806-1_4 Connelly, Matthew 2006. “Population Control in India: Prologue to the Emergency Period”. Population and Development Review, 324: 629-667. Eager, Paige Whaley 2017. Global population policy: From population control to reproductive rights. London, Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315254180/ GLOBAL-POPULATION-POLICY-PAIGE-WHALEY-EAGER