כללי סוגיות בסביבה, קיימות ושמירת טבע - אב"ג

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In recent decades, most of the world population growth is happening in:

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מיין לפי
by May Sohatchevzzki
May Sohatchevzzki 0 נקודות · יותר מ-6 חודשים
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נוסף למתורגם
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by Yonatan Naftali
Yonatan Naftali 12 נקודות · יותר מ-6 חודשים
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חינוך מיני גרוע + אין קונדומים => מלא ילדים
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by Dan Ohana
Dan Ohana 0 נקודות · יותר מ-6 חודשים
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הודו עניים מלא גידול של ילדים
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by Noa Amir
Noa Amir 2 נקודות · יותר מ-6 חודשים
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לעניים אין כסף לקונדומים
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by inbar gerad
inbar gerad 0 נקודות · יותר מ-6 חודשים
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Alright, buckle up for a joyride through demography—because nothing says “good times” like birth rates and mortality curves. In the grand theatre of global population dynamics, the spotlight these days painfully shines on the developing world. Here’s the grim rundown: 1. Demographic Momentum Many developing countries still hover in the late-transitional phase of the demographic transition model: high (though falling) fertility meets rapidly declining mortality. That means even if each woman only has, say, three children instead of six, you’re still adding millions of mouths—because last generation survived in droves. 😬 2. Age Structure Bulge A hefty proportion of the population is under 25, which translates into a tsunami of potential parents. More adolescents → more marriages → more births, regardless of whether they really want six kids or not. Fun! 🤡 3. Socio-Economic Factors Limited access to contraception, early marriage customs, and agricultural livelihoods that prize large families combine to keep fertility rates elevated—despite all those TED Talks on “empowering women.” 4. Contrast with Developed Regions In the U.S., E.U., Japan, and the like, low fertility (often <2.1 children per woman) plus aging societies mean stagnation or outright shrinkage. Cue the eugenic panic about “too many retirees.” 💀 Answer: D. The poor (developing) nations 😏
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* השאלה נוספה בתאריך: 27-07-2018