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All Our People
Population Policy With A Human Face
Klaus M. Leisinger and Karin Schmitt; Foreword by Robert S. McNamara
Island Press, 1994
Responding to those who argue that resources spent saving lives in impoverished and overpopulated regions are wasted, Klaus Leisinger and Karin Schmitt set forth the components of strategies that can bring down birth rates in an ethically acceptable way. They explain that development must: foster a political, legal, and economic environment that supports human development focus on the satisfaction of basic human needs improve the social status of women All Our People provides an in-depth, balanced treatment of such factors as human consumption patterns, the ethical issues surrounding population policy, and the role of women in development issues. The authors consider the wide range of conditions necessary to mitigate problems associated with population growth and the environment, including reformed attitudes and behavior patterns among people in industrial countries as well as global changes in economic, social, and political structures.
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Economic Development, Population Policy, and Demographic Transition in the Republic of Korea
Robert Repetto, Tae Hwan Kwon, Son-Ung Kim, Dae Young Kim, and Peter J. Donaldson
Harvard University Press, 1981
This latest volume in the series Studies in Modernization of the Republic of Korea: 1945-1975 examines the relationship between economic developments and the government’s population policy and its implementation. Against the background of Korea’s traditional population pattern and the baby boom of the 1950s, the authors consider the changes wrought by migration, fertility, decline, and the government’s evolving program for family planning. The change from a traditional agricultural economy with a high and largely unregulated birth rate to a predominantly urbanized economy with a widespread and sophisticated family-planning program is one further feature in the rapid modernization of Korean government and lifestyle since that country’s emergence from colonialism.
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RKFDV
German Resettlement and Population Policy, 1939-1945: A History of the Reich Commission for the Strengthening of Germandom
Robert L. Koehl
Harvard University Press

One of the most harrowing phenomena in recent political history was the attempt by the Nazi government to liquidate, shift, and redistribute the populations of the unfortunate territories that came under its domination during the second World War. By tracing the rise and fall of the agency created to effect this gigantic geopolitical movement, the RKFDV (Reichskommisariat fur die Festigung deutschen Volkstums or Reich Commission for the Strengthening of Germandom), Robert Koehl reveals the complexity, brutality, and inconsistency of National Socialism, the neofeudalism of Nazi power politics, and the nature of the men who manipulated the monstrous scheme.

Using captured documents which have never been published before, some signed by Hitler's and Himmler's own hands, Koehl relies for the main source of his study on the actual testimony, evidence, and statements made during the United States Military Tribunal Trials Numbers Eight and Eleven at Nuremberg. His conscientious marshaling of concrete facts serves better than the most dramatic intervention to drive home the implications of this recent tragedy involving millions of Germans, Poles, Frenchmen, Russians, Yugoslavs.

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