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I need a lot of help in this question- please help- i have to get this done for like 50 pts-- this is a great assignment... please help me...

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14y ago
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13y ago

Stage two.

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Q: What stage of the demographic transition model is Saudi Arabia in?
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How does demographic transition model influence migration?

by discovering the tranistion of immigrant


Where is Japan on the demographic transition model?

Japan is a stage five at the moment, which means that the birth rate has dropped dramatically while the death rate has remained somewhat stagnant. resulting in population decrease


Why is there more population growth of cities in LDCs compared to MDCs?

Beacause people think that a lot of babies will die to illness. And the fact that they need people to help out with farming and when the parents get older they will need children to care for them. Look at a Demographic Transition Model for more info.


Under what circumstances does the Bohr model fail to make accurate predictions of an atoms spectra?

The Bohr model fails to accurately predict an atom's spectra when dealing with more complex atoms that have multiple electrons. This is because the model assumes that electrons move in circular orbits around the nucleus, whereas in reality, electrons occupy regions of space called orbitals. Additionally, the model only accounts for the behavior of electrons in the ground state and does not consider excited states where electrons can transition between different energy levels.


What objections do neo-malthusians have with demographic transition model?

The DTM is used to classify countries into general groups. Hence, it is unable to take into account evolutionary changes in the process of population growth and classify diverse population into distinct but coherent stages of the development process. Neo-Malthusians argue that the long-term fertility of a population depends on the most rapidly-breeding subgroups within the population. In the short term, the overall population growth rate may slow as most of the existing people have fewer children, but if a rapidly-breeding subgroup sustains its high fertility, it will eventually expand its numbers and restore the whole population to high fertility. This is similar to the evolution of resistance to pesticides in insects, and to antibiotics among pathogens: the first applications kill large numbers, but a few surviving resistant individuals may eventually make good on the losses through exponential growth. In other words, a criticism of the DTM is that it is only valid if the fertility-lowering social changes that caused the DTM in present-day industrial nations permanently lower the fertility of every subgroup within each nation. Garrett Hardin doubted that purely voluntary birth control could achieve that result; Hardin argued that voluntary birth control merely selects against the people who will use it