Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 276
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-78348-591-8 • Hardback • July 2016 • $184.00 • (£142.00)
978-1-78348-592-5 • Paperback • July 2016 • $62.00 • (£48.00)
978-1-78348-593-2 • eBook • July 2016 • $58.50 • (£45.00)
Tony Champion is Emeritus Professor of Population Geography at Newcastle University and has a long-standing interest in spatial patterns of population and migration. He was President of the British Society for Population Studies in 2013-15.
Jane Falkingham is Professor of Demography and International Social Policy at the University of Southampton and Director of the ESRC Centre for Population Change whose remit is to ‘improve our understanding of the drivers and consequences of populations change’. She is the current (2015-17) BSPS President.
Contributors:
Ann Berrington, Professor of Demography and Social Statistics, University of Southampton
Jakub Bijak, Associate Professor of Demography, University of Southampton
Gemma Catney, Dept of Geography, University of Liverpool
Ernestina Coast, Assoc. Prof. of Population Studies, London School of Economics
Ian Diamond, University of Aberdeen
George Disney, post-graduate, University of Southampton
Sylvie Dubuc, London School of Economics
Maria Evandrou, Professor of Gerontology, University of Southampton
Nissa Finney, University of St Andrews
Emily Freeman, Dept of Health and Social Policy, London School of Economics
Ursula Henz, Dept of Sociology, London School of Economics
Sarah Lubman, postdoc, University of Southampton
Alan Marshall, Dept of Geography, University of St Andrews
James Nazroo, Professor of Sociology, University of Manchester
Paul Norman, Lecturer in Human Geography, University of Leeds
Ludi Simpson, Professor of Population Studies, University of Manchester
Athina Vlachantoni, Associate Professor of Gerontology, University of Southampton
Arkadiusz Wiśniowski, University of Southampton
List of Tables / List of Figures / Foreword by Professor Sir Ian Diamond / Preface by the Editors / 1. Population Change in the UK: What Can the Last 25 Years Tell us About the Next 25 Years?, Jane Falkingham and Tony Champion / 2. The Ageing Population: Implications for Health and Social Care, Maria Evandrou, Jane Falkingham and Athina Vlachantoni / 3. Inequalities in the Experience of Later Life: Differentials in Health, Wealth and Wellbeing, Alan Marshall and James Nazroo / 4. International Migration and Asylum Seekers, Jakub Bijak, George Disney, Sarah Lubman and Arkadiusz Wiśniowski / 5. Immigrants and Ethnic Fertility Convergence, Sylvie Dubuc / 6. Children's Changing Family Context, Ursula Henz / 7. Household Composition and Housing Need, Ann BerringtonandLudi Simpson / 8. Internal Migration and the Spatial Distribution of Population, Tony Champion / 9. Ethnic Diversity, Nissa Finney and Gemma Catney / 10. Reproductive and Sexual Behaviour and Health, Ernestina Coast and Emily Freeman / 11. The Changing Geography of Deprivation: 1971 to 2011 and Beyond, Paul Norman / Bibliography / Index / Notes on Contributors
[T]he editors have delivered a book that will serve as a benchmark in demographic research for the next 25 years…. Champion and Falkingham have brought together contributions that collectively provide an authoritative portrayal of the transformations occurring over the last quarter of a century. Whilst each chapter offers new insights into changes in the structure and composition of the population or the underlying behavioural processes and their outcomes, the volume as a whole provides a comprehensive and very useful synthesis of the complex and interrelated nature of socio-demographic dynamics. It is indeed a worthy successor to Joshi’s collection published in 1989 and one that I feel sure that many academics and policy makers will refer to in the years ahead.— Population, Space, and Place
The volume is well conceived and executed. The tables and charts, as one would expect from the BSPS and editors, are a model.— Population and Development Review
How much has population changed in Britain? Where has it changed? What has been driving changes? Where might they be heading? This book considers births, deaths, migration (external and internal), ageing, social and spatial inequalities, ethnicity, families, households and sexual behaviour. These important essays by leading experts are all the more valuable, as the government no longer publishes regular commentary.— Heather Joshi, Emeritus Professor of Economic and Developmental Demography at the Centre for Longitudinal Studies, University College London
The population in the United Kingdom is changing fast. This volume guides us through the key drivers and implications of population change in a careful, rigorous and fascinating way. Demography, as a science, was born in Britain more than three centuries ago. It is alive and kicking, and more relevant than ever before.— Francesco C. Billari FBA, Professor of Sociology and Demography, University of Oxford
An authoritative portrayal of the transformations occurring over the last quarter of a century. Whilst each chapter offers new insights into changes in either the structure and composition of the population or the underlying behavioural processes, the volume as a whole provides a comprehensive synthesis of the complex and interrelated nature of socio-demographic dynamics. It is indeed a worthy successor to Joshi’s collection published in 1989.— John Stillwell, Professor of Migration and Regional Development, University of Leeds
The volume is well conceived and executed. The tables and charts, as one would expect from the BSPS and editors, are a model.— Population and Development Review
This edited volume is an important book for the study of population changes in the United Kingdom.
— Canadian Studies in Population, 45/1-2