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China: population change and population control

GeoJournal, 1986
Since 1949 China's population has increased by 500 million and thereby grown at an average rate of 2 % per year. Annual growth rates have varied dramatically, falling from 3.3 % in 1963 to 1.2 % in 1979 and registering a population decline of 13.5 million in the famine years of 1960/61.
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Population Control Charts for Population Data

Journal for Healthcare Quality, 2007
Healthcare managers are beginning to collect full population data, rather than sample data, on some patient and performance measures. For example, hospitals and healthcare systems already gather and store comprehensive data on admissions, ambulatory encounters, and other procedures.
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Populism

2017
Populism: An Introduction is the first introduction to the theme of populism. It will introduce the principal theories, definitions, models and contemporary debates. A number of global case studies will be used to illustrate the concept: • Russian populism; • Latin American populism; • Italian populism.
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Population Structure in Kanoya Population, Japan

Human Heredity, 1978
The mean inbreeding coefficients found for Minami-cho (366 couples) and Shinsei-cho (511 couples) were 0.00307 and 0.00191, respectively. The mean inbreeding coefficient decreased and the mean marital distance increased as the year of marriage becomes more recent.
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Population Trends, Population Policy, and Population Studies in China

Population and Development Review, 1981
Recently available data confirm reports of a Chinese population of almost a billion with a very low death rate and a birth rate that has been halved in 15 years. Illustrative projections of the demographic implications of different trajectories of future fertility demonstrate that a cessation of growth by 2000 would require implausably low fertility ...
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POPULATION

Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1946
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Population

Scientific American, 1928
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