TY - BOOK AU - Landers,John AU - Reynolds,Vernon TI - Fertility and resources: 31st symposium volume of the Society for the Study of Human Biology T2 - Society for the Study of Human Biology symposium series SN - 9780511661617 (ebook) AV - GN241 .S63 1990 U1 - 304.6/32 20 PY - 1990/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Fertility, Human KW - Congresses KW - Cross-cultural studies KW - Human beings KW - Effect of environment on N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015); Environmental and social determinants of fecundity in primates / R.I.M. Dunbar -- Biological aspects of fertility among Third World populations / L. Rosetta -- A preliminary report on fertility and socio-economic changes in two Papua New Guinea communities / T. Taufa, V. Mea and J. Lourie -- The cultural context of fertility transition in immigrant Mennonites / J.C. Stevenson and P.M. Everson -- Inter-relationships between consanguinity, religion and fertility in Karnataka, South India / A.H. Bittles, A. Radha Rama Devi and N. Appaji Rao -- Resources and the fertility transition in the countryside of England and Wales / P.R.A. Hinde -- Fertility decline and birth spacing among London Quakers / J. Landers -- Population growth, innovation and resource exploitation / E. Boserup -- Fertility decline in developing countries : the roles of economic modernization, culture and government interventions / J. Cleland -- Understanding recent fertility trends in the Third World / A.G. Hill -- Monogamy, landed property and demographic regimes in pre-industrial Europe : regional contrasts and temporal stabilities / R.M. Smith N2 - Fertility in animals reflects access to scarce resources, such as food and territory. In humans the situation is more complex. Patterns of breast feeding, contraception and ideas about age at marriage and desired family size all affect fertility. The relation between these and access to scarce resources such as housing and employment, via income, education and other factors that affect status, is explored. In this book, the gap between socio-ecology and population demography is bridged, by showing how animals and humans adjust their fertility to environmental conditions UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511661617 ER -