Author:Fred Pearce
Wherever we look, population is the driver of the most toxic issues on the political agenda. But the population bomb is being defused. Half the world's women are having two children or fewer. Within a generation, the world's population will be falling. And we will all be getting very old.
So should we welcome the return to centre stage of the tribal elders? Or is humanity facing a fate worse than environmental apocalypse?
Brilliant, heretical and accessible to all, Fred Pearce takes on the matter that is fundamental to who we are and how we live, confronting our demographic demons.
With his usual clarity and dash Fred Pearce brings us the best news we've heard in 10,000 years - that the human population should soon level out, at a number that should be quite manageable; and some of the problems that may seem so dire in truth are assets - including the rise in average age and the increase in migration. This isn't wishful thinking - it's hard science. And it changes everything.
—— Colin TudgePeoplequake is a debate-shaping book. Sobre, fascinating, it redraws the boundaries of the population debate. Pearce points out that the Earth could adequately meet the needs of a bigger population, but only once natural resources are shared more equally and managed using ecological
principles. The population bomb would defuse itself even quicker if we tackled over-consumption by the rich instead of fretting about the poor having children. This brilliant book's insights could save many lives and stop many more from suffering.
What a wonderfully rich and humane book! As a generation of newly-empowered women sweeps away our wrongheaded Malthusian nightmare, Fred Pearce demonstrates persuasively that the end of the population surge may well usher in a new era of ethnic tolerance, increased global integration and a period of kinder and more nurturing governance.
—— Ross Gelbspan, author of THE HEAT IS ON and BOILING POINTFearless and well-informed; every paragraph crackles. Pearce evokes past and present with vivid detail and startlingly coherent insight.
—— Jesse H. Ausubel, Director of the Program for the Human Environment and Senior Research Associate at The Rockefeller UniversityThis is a well written and important book ... we highly recommend (Fred Pearce's) book - everyone should be grateful that he wrote it
—— New ScientistSuper-optimistic ... Even those who disagree should welcome this articulate contribution to a much needed debate.
—— Clive Cookson , Financial Times