SOC 3200 Comp. – Flashcards

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When making long-range demographic forecasts - demographers:
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Appreciate the likelihood of unanticipated future turns. State that what is anticipated is based on present information. Appreciate the complexity of human demographic systems
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According to the text, most populations are "closed."
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False
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The Growth rate is the rate at which increase or decrease occurs due to natural increase and net migration.
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True
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A calculation that shows future development when assumptions are made about future fertility, mortality, and migration... hypothetical. This is a:
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Population projections
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Which of the following is NOT true of population "growth"?
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Growth is not measured by demographers.
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The growth equation used most often in demography is:
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The balancing equation
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The four central features of a census are:
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simultaneity, periodicity, individuality, universality
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According to the text, there are a wide variety of surveys that have been repeated over time and serve as major sources of population data.
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true
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Another name for the Ecological Complex model is:
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the POET model
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Sociologists use the Demographic Transition theory to:
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Describe the interplay of human fertility and mortality.
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The four components of the POET model are:
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Population, organization, environment, technology
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Most environmentalists believe that the population can continue to expand indefinitely; that humanity doesn't need to worry about ways to limit increase
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false
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In the POET model, Organization refers to
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The structural arrangements of groups.
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According to the text, most countries of the world appear to have experienced or begun a basic demographic transition.
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true
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Age and sex are the most universally studied dimensions of population composition because:
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They change predictably. They are basic to social ascription of roles. They are related to demographic behavior
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"Representation of the performance of a subset of the population; the TFR is an example because it uses calculations specific to women and child bearing age increments." This is the definition of:
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Age-sex specific rates
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Role ascription to sociologists, means assigning people to roles on the basis of traits over which the individual has no control.
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True
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Societies never use age and sex in ascribing roles.
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False
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Which term is used when the median age of a population increases?
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aging of a population
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According to the text. The likelihood of dying, giving birth, or migrating varies with age and sex.
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true
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According to the text, the problems resulting from age structure in the MDRs are just about opposite of those in the LDRs.
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true
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Ethnicity is based not on biology, but on shared cultural heritage.
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true
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Races are socially constructed categories by which societies set apart people according to various physical traits.
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true
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In the 2000 census, Hispanics numbered more than ______ (12.5 percent of the U.S. population.)
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35 million
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According to the text, in the first decade of this century (in the U.S.) Hispanics were projected to outnumber Blacks as the largest ethnic minority in the country.
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true
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According to the text, in the last half-century (in the U.S.) the "minority' ethnic population (i.e. nonwhites and Hispanic groups) has more than __________ in size.
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tripled
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In U.S. Census Data terms Hispanics may be of any race.
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true
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The revision of the question on race and Hispanic origin was one of the most important changes for Census 2000.
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true
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Life expectancy in North America is more than 20 years greater than expected in poor countries like Africa.
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true
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"The age one dies - length of an individual's life," is the definition given for:
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longevity
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Mortality rates vary across:
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Social status Socioeconomic status Age and sex
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"The sequence of events an individual experiences and the positions he/she occupies as they mature and move through life," is the definition given for:
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life course
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Advances in medicine, specifically immunization, came very early in the mortality transitions of MDRs.
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false
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"The maximum age an individual could reach under optimum conditions," is the definition given for
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life span
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To construct a life table one needs:
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A Radix - hypothetical population. The number of people in a population by age distribution (and sex.) Age (and sex) specific death rates.
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Which of the following led to the term "medicalization?"
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understanding the impact of social pathologies. understanding the role of the sick individual. understanding the influence of the societal environment.
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Medical Sociology is an academic discipline which focuses on:
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relationships of systems of health care delivery to other social systems. social functions of health institutions and organization. social facets of health and illness.
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Disease and disability affect the likelihood of:
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marriage, divorce and widowhood. migration. successful childbearing.
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Many of the issues medical professionals face contemporarily are not necessarily associated with disease.
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true
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Just as there are degrees of illness, there are degrees of health.
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True
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Which researcher found people from communities of higher SES have better health in general than those living in lower SES communities?
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robert
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Which researcher claimed "death is an observable, measurable, and dramatic sign of social inequalities?"
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goldscheider
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fertility is
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The incidence of childbearing in a country's population.
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Leaders of the U.N. efforts of population control have claimed that women with access to school and jobs can decide if, and when to marry, and bear children as a matter of choice.
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true
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Some of the social and cultural changes that have been theorized to support shifts in fertility are:
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The increasing role options for women. Improved infant survivorship. The decreased economic value of children.
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The Total Fertility Rate is the average number of children born per woman throughout her childbearing ages. The TFR in the U.S. in 1800 was 7, in the 1970s it fell below 2.1, which is the rate required to maintain a population at its same level. Which of the following countries is currently below replacement level fertility?
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The U.S. and Canada New Zealand Japan and Australia
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Which of the following researchers did NOT propose a theory of fertility decline in relation to the Demographic Transition theory?
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Malthus
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High-risk pregnancies are pregnancies, which have increased odds of not producing live births due to factors like mothers being too young, too old, having poor health (high blood pressure, diabetes,) pregnancies too closely spaced or too frequent.
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true
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In LDRs almost all of women's fecund years are taken up with childbearing.
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true
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Most populations produce far fewer births than they could if everyone was working at biological capacity.
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true
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Which researcher claimed: ideas, ideology, literacy, and organized assistance led to the fertility transition of 19th century Europe and 20th century less developed countries.
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caldwell
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According to Friedman's Uncertainty Reduction Model:
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Essentially people are insecure, and have children to minimize doubt. People desire stability and confidence in the future; having children confers a parental role, which provides structure to future interactions and circumstances, limiting uncertainty. The desire to have children is not related to economic reasons but to minimized uncertainty in life.
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Only a portion of the U.S. women's fecund years normally are taken up with childbearing.
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true
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Since the mid 1950s both men and women in the U.S. have experienced a steady __________ in the proportion of the population never married.
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increase
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Since the mid 1950s both men and women in the U.S. have experienced a __________ in the proportion married.
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decline
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Why are demographers interested in marriage and householding?
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They act collectively to influence the processes of fertility, migration and mortality. They act together to bear children, to move, and to help each other survive. Households, and the families who reside together in them are social units.
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Since the 1960s, ______ of the population moves across state lines in a five-year period.
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10%
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Location specific capital refers to assets or features specific to a place that are valuable to an individual who lives there rather than somewhere else.
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true
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The study of migration primarily focuses on patterns and processes of human movement questioning:
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why, who, when and where
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No matter how a population is defined, there are only two ways of entering it, and there are only two ways of exiting it.
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true
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Census data tend to provide information about the individual's place of birth, residence five years ago, and current residence. This is particularly problematic for studying repeat migration because much of this migration is sequenced over a few intervals.
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true
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Drawing on economic theory we often view migration as an investment in human capital that entails costs and produces benefits.
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true
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The term selectivity in demographic study relates to characteristics of a group doing a thing or action, different from those not doing that thing or action.
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true
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A key purpose of my own research has been to determine if there are differences in the overall rates of repeat migration for Racial/ethnic groups once other factors are controlled.
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true
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The extensive mobility of Americans implies that migration has become a most important source of demographic change, especially in view of:
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the falling fertility rates to american women
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Since the 1960s, approximately ______ of the population moves across state lines in any given year.
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3%
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Which of the following are examples of location specific capital?
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Job seniority Personal knowledge Family and friendships
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Perhaps the oldest and most central theory associated with human migration is the model of:
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push-pull
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The study of migration is a study of mankind and a phenomenon of present interest to historians, social scientists and specifically Demographers.
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true
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Research comparing the migration of Blacks and Whites in the U.S. suggests there are no differences between age and ethnic groups.
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false
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What some call formal or pure demography focuses on life course processes that change a population's composition: fertility, mortality and migration.
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True
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According to the text, the largest populations of the world are not those with the highest density.
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true
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Which of the following is NOT true of "Probabilities:"
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They are the number of one thing relative to another
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What you believe likely - assumptions considered to yield a realistic picture of probable development of a population - based on actual data. This is a:
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Population Forecast
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Which of the following is not a Census term?
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Cohort/Period Measure
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According to the text, there are a wide variety of surveys that have been repeated over time and serve as major sources of population data. Correct!
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True
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Most environmentalists believe that the population can continue to expand indefinitely; that humanity doesn't need to worry about ways to limit increase.
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False
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A demographic transition is a shift from high fertility and high mortality to low fertility and low mortality.
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True
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Sociologists use the Demographic Transition theory to:
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Describe the interplay of human fertility and mortality.
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According to the text, demographic projections:
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assume that present trends will continue.
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The Sex ratio is the number of men per 1000 women in a population.
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False
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Representation of the performance of a subset of the population; the TFR is an example because it uses calculations specific to women and child bearing age increments." This is the definition of:
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Age-sex specific rates
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According to the text, censuses never make errors in recording the simple aspects of age and sex.
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False
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In the U.S. diversity is not increasing.
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False
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Hispanics and Asian Americans are the fastest growing ethnic groups in the country.
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true
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Which of the following is/are correct in terms of the Censuses Presentation and Comparison of Race and Hispanic Origin Data:
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In surveys and censuses, separate questions are asked on Hispanic origin and race. Starting with Census 2000, the question on race asks respondents to report the race or races they consider themselves to be. The federal government treats Hispanic origin and race as separate and distinct concepts.
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"The maximum age an individual could reach under optimum conditions," is the definition given for:
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Life span
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"The average number years a person would live if mortality trends were to continue," is the definition given for:
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Life expectancy
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Which researcher found Black, Puerto Rican, Mexican, and Central Island Americans are at higher risk (of experiencing Infant Mortality) due to socioeconomic characteristics?
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Hummer et al.
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The 1994 International conference on population and development in Cairo was historic due to:
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The role played by women in their participation and deliberations
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Fertility is:
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The incidence of childbearing in a country's population.
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Fecundity is:
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The biological capacity to produce a live birth.
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Which researcher claimed: the trend toward "controlled fertility" indicated by younger and lower parity women who were acceptors of contraceptives in the National family planning program, supports diffusion hypothesis: diffusion of knowledge and use of contraception.
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Hirschman
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Which of the following is a false statement?
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Fertility does not contribute to population growth.
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Early 19th century differentials in marital fertility were mainly caused by voluntary family size limitation.
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False
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Women who are never-married at the age of _____ are very unlikely ever to marry.
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50
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Questions regarding marriage do not change from census to census.
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False
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People do not migrate if they expect the benefits to outweigh the costs.
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False
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Age and life cycle stages are almost never related to migration patterns.
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False
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In relation to migration, Social Scientists have considered:
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the determinants and constraints on migration decision making. the personal characteristics of the mover and his or her propensity to migrate. the social, economic and geographical characteristics of origins and destinations.
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