According to a recent report of the United States Census Bureau, world
population as of June 30, 1983, was estimated at about 4. 7 billion
people; of this total, an estimated 82 million had been added in the
previous year. World population in 1950 was estimated at about 2. 5
billion; consequently, if 82 million poeple are added to the world
population in each of the coming four years, population size will be
double that of 1950. Another way of viewing the yearly increase in world
population is to compare it to 234 million, the estimated current
population of the United States. If the excess of births over deaths
continues, a group of young people equivalent to the population of the
United States will be added to the world population about every 2. 85
years. Although the rate of increase in world population has slowed
since the midsixties, it seems likely that large numbers of infants will
be added to the population each year for the foreseeable future. A large
current world population together with a high likelihood of sub-
stantial increments in size every year has prompted public and scholarly
recognition of population as a practical problem. Tangible evidence in
the public domain that population is being increasingly viewed as a
problem is provided by the fact that many governments around the world
either have or plan to implement policies regarding population. Evidence
of scholarly concern is provided by an increasing flow of publications
dealing with population.