Does our world now have more people than it can reasonably sustain? if current growth rates continue, will overpopulation be the cause of ever-increasing hunger, poverty, and environmental degradation? Will we run out of resources? And if the world is becoming overpopulated, what is the most wise, humane, and effective response by concerned governments and organizations?These are some of the questions that engaged twenty-six scholars and practitioners at a conference sponsored by the Ethics and public Policy Center in October 1993. The four papers and two related responses from that conference form the nucleus of this book
Does our world now have more people than it can reasonably sustain? if current growth rates continue, will overpopulation be the cause of ever-increasing hunger, poverty, and environmental degradation? Will we run out of resources? And if the world is becoming overpopulated, what is the most wise, humane, and effective response by concerned governments and organizations?These are some of the questions that engaged twenty-six scholars and practitioners at a conference sponsored by the Ethics and public Policy Center in October 1993. The four papers and two related responses from that conference form the nucleus of this book