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Paul R. Ehrlich Stanford, Calif., March 12, 2005 The writer is a professor of population studies at Stanford University.
His father, who is retired, was the director of population studies for the Organization of American States in Washington.
"We're waging a war on the environment, a very successful one," says Paul Ehrlich, professor of population studies at Stanford University.
The father of the population bomb, Dr. Ehrlich, a professor of population studies and biology at Stanford, says he was "pleasantly surprised" by global changes that have undermined the book's gloomiest projections.
Now Bing professor of population studies at Stanford University in California, Ehrlich reignited the issue in 1968 with his book The Population Bomb – co-written, without acknowledgment, with his wife, Anne Ehrlich – which has sold more than 2m copies.
Paul Ehrlich, Bing professor of population studies at Stanford University in California and author of the best-selling Population Bomb book in 1968, goes much further than the Royal Society in London which this morning said that physical numbers were as important as the amount of natural resources consumed.
"It's certainly consistent with what we've all been noting, the growth in cohabitation in this country, but it also tells us how complex American families are becoming," said Freya L. Sonenstein, director of population studies at the Urban Institute in Washington and a visiting fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California.
Ludi Simpson, professor of population studies at the University of Manchester, who led the study, says: "This tool will be of interest to anyone with an interest finding out what the profile of people living in their local area is like.
WEDNESDAY -- The Provost Lecture Series at the State University at Stony Brook begins with Dr. Paul R. Erlich, the best-selling author and professor of population studies in Stanford University's department of biological sciences, discussing "Human Natures: Genes, Ethics and the Human Predictament" at 7 p.m. in the Student Activities Center.
David Voas, professor of population studies at the University of Essex, told the Times that white British people are losing their taste for worship, in contrast to the UK's expanding population of ethnic minorities.
Diagnosis is a basic component of population studies on echinococcosis.
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