• El Alto is today one of Bolivia's fastest-growing urban centers, with an estimated population of 943,558 in 2020. (wikipedia.org)
  • Seventy percent of the population now enjoys access to free health care while 45 percent of the people receive subsidized food via cooperatives, special food programs and government distribution centers. (counterpunch.org)
  • Rising rates of urbanization, the expansion of the middle class and high rates of mobile internet adoption also contributed to the rise of delivery services in urban centers like Manila, where time-poor consumers have the disposable income to pay a premium for home-delivery options," the Fitch unit said. (philstar.com)
  • High housing prices in the prosperous urban areas hinder the internal migration that would allow workers to move from the less developed rural areas to the urban economic centers and hence to benefit from the overall growth trend. (lu.se)
  • This transformation was accompanied by migration from the rural inland provinces to the urban growth centers along the eastern coast. (lu.se)
  • China experienced a substantial house price boom especially in the urban centers (Figure 3). (lu.se)
  • This blog draws on findings from a new report from Dalberg and WWF - Protecting Tigers from Asia's Infrastructure Development Boom. (dalberg.com)
  • As Asia's population grows rapidly, so will the demand for linear infrastructure. (dalberg.com)
  • By 2050, Asia's urban population is projected to reach more than 3 billion people, and an estimated 11,000 kilometres of roads and railways are already planned for construction through tiger landscapes. (dalberg.com)
  • While Asia's continued economic rise is a given, other megatrends in the region such as aging populations, urbanization and changing health issues will create major challenges, the president of the East-West Center in Hawaii told business leaders at the Asia-Pacific Business Symposium in Honolulu. (asiasentinel.com)
  • Asia's growing populations and economies will put tremendous pressure on the world's resources, Morrison said. (asiasentinel.com)
  • The table below shows the resident, temporary, and active daytime (resident + temporary) population by year from 2016 to 2021. (dubai-online.com)
  • However, the population began to increase in 2021, although at a slower rate than the pre-pandemic increases. (dubai-online.com)
  • According to the Dubai Statistics Center , at the end of 2021, only about 8 per cent of Dubai's resident population were Emirati citizens. (dubai-online.com)
  • At the end of 2021, 69 per cent of the permanent resident population was male and 31 per cent female. (dubai-online.com)
  • 08/17/2021 financiero y adaptaciones repentinas en el rendimiento del trabajo. (bvsalud.org)
  • We still haven't found a way to make San Francisco and the surrounding areas, and Los Angeles and its surrounding areas, build more housing more quickly," said Lens, adding that the housing crunch has driven population loss. (latimes.com)
  • Bus rides that would take 40 minutes in an efficient system take more than twice that in Brazil's urban areas. (wri.org)
  • At the time, German urban areas were overcrowded due to a population boom. (kmuw.org)
  • Expanding network capacity to accommodate Tennessee's booming population growth in urban areas. (businessinsider.com)
  • That will put pressure on governments to make urban areas better places to live. (bbc.co.uk)
  • By 2050, an estimated two-thirds of the world's population will live in urban areas, imposing even more pressure on the space infrastructure and resources of cities, leading to social disintegration and horrific urban poverty," says Werner Fornos, president of the Washington-based institute. (bbc.co.uk)
  • The convenience that the streetcar provided facilitated a boom in urban populations as citizens could move to suburban areas and become the first commuters. (illinois.edu)
  • Simultaneously, China has efficiently integrated into the global capitalist trade and implemented market-oriented policies, which have sacrificed and compromised the rural areas for the urban ones, with the whole rural economic ecosystem in shambles. (richdadeducation.com)
  • With the urban areas better connected to the world, the rural areas were abandoned for the urban ones. (richdadeducation.com)
  • The best known migratory patterns were from farms and small towns to regional cities, from Southern agriculture to Northern manufacturing, and from poorer heartland areas to booming cities on the West Coast. (newgeography.com)
  • In addition, virtually all the highest-income metro areas have experienced net domestic population outflows. (newgeography.com)
  • The nub of the amendment is that couples living in urban areas are now permitted to have two children if one of the parents is an only child. (gcimagazine.com)
  • China's current population of babies and toddlers (aged 0-4) is 67 million, of which around half live in urban areas. (gcimagazine.com)
  • As the population of girls grows in urban areas, the female consumer base for beauty and personal care will expand too, translating into billions of dollars of new business for manufacturers of skin care, hair care and color cosmetics. (gcimagazine.com)
  • This growth will likely lead to more deliveries and an increase in freight volume in urban areas. (worldbank.org)
  • In this context, the Bank has been working with the cities of Sao Paulo and Bangalore to develop a new tool that helps evaluate how different transport policies and interventions can impact e-commerce logistics in urban areas ( GiULia ). (worldbank.org)
  • Booming populations have led to water scarcity in many areas of Asia. (asiasentinel.com)
  • Understanding the effect of population review draws on published reports and growths in their urban populations change on economic growth and devel- studies by individual researchers and (Table 1), as people from rural areas opment is taking on added importance those in international organizations. (who.int)
  • Binary logistic regression models were used to evaluate the relationship between ADL limitations and family doctor contract services, to examine the potential differences between urban and rural areas. (bvsalud.org)
  • To il ustrate these in- migrations I offer an account of a complex and contradictory agrarian landscape emerging in peri- urban areas of Eastern Taiwan. (lu.se)
  • Figure 1: While between urban-rural income inequality has been falling, within-area inequality - especially in the urban areas - has risen. (lu.se)
  • Figure 2: High urban-rural income gaps promoted migration to urban areas. (lu.se)
  • Inequality in China used to be dominated by a gap between the urban and the rural areas: a between-area inequality (Shorrocks and Wan, 2005). (lu.se)
  • The substantial urban-rural earnings gap makes it attractive to live in the urban areas and within-country migration has allowed a larger chunk of the population to participate in the growth of the manufacturing sector. (lu.se)
  • Using a theoretical model, the analysis shows that the pronounced migration from the rural areas exerts upward pressure on urban house prices. (lu.se)
  • Despite substantial income differentials between urban and rural areas, individuals do not migrate as the higher income is devoured by higher living costs (associated with rental housing in the urban areas). (lu.se)
  • While in the urban areas those already lived there originally and domestic migrants share a place of residence, they are not equally well-off in terms of income and consumption. (lu.se)
  • The model suggests that consumption inequality has increased even more than income inequality in the urban areas. (lu.se)
  • Its purpose is to identify possible areas of intervention and research in order to increase the participation of this population and its organizations in HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention efforts. (bvsalud.org)
  • Sanitation for urban India means building flush toilets and linking them to sewer systems. (org.in)
  • More than 300 million new residents will join them over the next few decades to become part of the new urban India. (thecityfix.com)
  • This is a topic we'll discuss extensively during next week's CONNECTKaro , a sustainable transport and urban development conference co-hosted by EMBARQ India, WRI's center for sustainable transport in India. (thecityfix.com)
  • EMBARQ India will host CONNECTKaro , a conference on sustainable transport and urban development, on April 15-16, 2013. (thecityfix.com)
  • While the Dubai Statistics Center does not give a detailed breakdown of the city's population by nationality, the United Nations estimates that 40 per cent of the total number of migrants in the UAE are from India. (dubai-online.com)
  • In India, 40% of the population-approximately 450 million people -have access to the internet. (worldbank.org)
  • I was there as part of a UK-India conversation on urban development, which included the visit to the new estate. (fabians.org.uk)
  • Even as California's population took a hit during the pandemic, new data show the state experienced a boom in home building the likes of which has not been seen since the Great Recession. (latimes.com)
  • Unaffordability and the pandemic have driven several years of population loss in California, a trend that continued in 2022, when the state lost around 138,400 people, a 0.35% loss. (latimes.com)
  • Supporters of the ordinance, including the San Francisco Cannabis Retailers Alliance, told the Board of Supervisors that the cannabis industry is experiencing a drop-off in business following a boom during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, and that a tax hike would result in higher prices for consumers. (wesa.fm)
  • The COVID-19 pandemic had had a significant impact on the active daytime population. (dubai-online.com)
  • In 2020, the number of tourists and workers decreased sharply as a result of the pandemic, leading to a decrease in the active daytime population. (dubai-online.com)
  • The second focuses on health and aging, where the design for well-being takes centre-stage in both institutional and residential construction in the face of a global pandemic and an aging population. (urbantoronto.ca)
  • COVID-19 was directly attributable to 69% of ED. CONCLUSION: Deaths directly and indirectly associated with the COVID-19 pandemic were markedly higher than reported, especially for older populations, in hospital settings, and during peak weeks of SARS-CoV-2 transmission. (cdc.gov)
  • El Alto is the largest city in Latin America with a mostly Indigenous population. (wikipedia.org)
  • It's estimated that 80% of the Indigenous populations of the Herero and Nama died during the genocide. (kmuw.org)
  • If this sounds like a truism at a time when the majority of the world's population is urbanised - currently around 52 per cent - and more than 80 per cent of world gross domestic product is concentrated in urban clusters, in fact, it is not. (asiaone.com)
  • For the first time in about half a century, the city's population is growing. (urban.org)
  • Tokyo is expected to be pushed into second place, with a population of 27.3 million by 2020. (bbc.co.uk)
  • These projects provide a model of transportation reform, empowering and inspiring other Brazilian cities to achieve sustainable urban mobility. (wri.org)
  • FLIP/CITY proposes a new urban identity for Shanghai as a model for the development of future cities. (e-architect.com)
  • Yet cities have boomed like never before in the last two decades. (asiaone.com)
  • In the United States, cities with a population of more than 150,000 account for 84 per cent of GDP. (asiaone.com)
  • Even in newly urban China, cities with more than 200,000 inhabitants account for 78 per cent of the economy. (asiaone.com)
  • As urban populations boom, transportation is ever the growing concern in most cities and bikes are an obvious, implementable fix. (shareable.net)
  • But at the end of the century, Tokyo, New York and Los Angeles were the only industrialised cities to feature on the list of the 19 cities which have populations of at least 10 million people. (bbc.co.uk)
  • While the population growth of cities in the industrialised world has somewhat stabilised, most of the increase occurs in the cities of the poor, less developed nations", the institute says. (bbc.co.uk)
  • At present, 47% of the world's six billion population lives in cities and more will join them. (bbc.co.uk)
  • The 2006 National Urban Transport Policy (NUTP) promoted "moving people, not vehicles," and rightly recognized the need for changes in the way the country invested in urban transport to improve the quality of life for people in cities. (thecityfix.com)
  • Cities that wish to access funds from the government's $20 million scheme for upgrading urban infrastructure, the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JnNURM), must comply with standards set out in the NUTP, such as equitable allocation of road space, priority to the use of public transport, and integrating land use and transport planning. (thecityfix.com)
  • While a significant portion of transportation funding is still set aside for the development of urban roads, central policies like the NUTP-coupled with success stories from cities like Ahmedabad-lend credibility to the idea that investments in sustainable urban transport should be the way forward for Indian cities. (thecityfix.com)
  • For instance, the rural population has not benefited much from its economic growth, though, in its defense, most of the population lives in big cities. (richdadeducation.com)
  • The solutions may not be the same in developing and developed countries, even if there are sometimes similar patterns among megacities, or cities with similar urban forms. (worldbank.org)
  • Rapid and unplanned urbanisation is the main reason that South Asian cities from Karachi to Kathmandu are so vulnerable to floods, with the poorest most at risk as urban populations boom, researchers and officials in the region said. (eco-business.com)
  • By 2008, there were 10 such cities according to population estimates, with Tokyo's GDP exceeding that of Canada. (asiasentinel.com)
  • Beijing, host of the 2008 summer Olympic Games, has listed a batch of new projects concerning water treatment and recycling to improve its urban infrastructure. (china.org.cn)
  • Due to major state investment in telecommunication infrastructure and a relatively underdeveloped physical retail sector, China has witnessed a boom in online retail, which offers better variety, lower prices, and greater convenience. (forbes.com)
  • This population boom will stress an already-pressured urban infrastructure system, especially with regard to transportation. (thecityfix.com)
  • The urban poor generally occupy, or are pushed to, floodplains where roads, drainages and other infrastructure are generally poorly maintained," said Madhukar Upadhya, an independent watershed and climate change expert. (eco-business.com)
  • The first is urban growth, highlighting the high-rise condo boom that has swept across the country over the past couple decades, and the necessary infrastructure and public realm design needed to accommodate an increasing urban population. (urbantoronto.ca)
  • Beginning with what are called ¨Misiones" or Missions in 1999, Chavez has fomented an incredible number of grass roots activities among the 80 percent of Venezuela's population that has been historically marginalized. (counterpunch.org)
  • Bombay, home to about 18 million people, will over the next two decades see its population grow to about 28.5 million, according to the Washington-based Population Institute, in its annual overview of world population trends. (bbc.co.uk)
  • In only two decades, the white population fell by over 300,000 and D.C. became majority African American in the late 1950s. (urban.org)
  • After several decades of economic hardship and social deprivation , the area now has several large-scale urban renewal projects. (wikipedia.org)
  • By expanding Shanghai up along the vertical plane, Shanghai's characteristic urban pattern of patchwork typologies can accommodate a wider range of functions. (e-architect.com)
  • For the next few years, the black population continued to grow, but following the riots of the late 1960s, the black middle class began its own escape to the suburbs. (urban.org)
  • This week National Geographic has an interesting piece on Chicago's urban coyotes -after dwindling habitats first drove them into the bird-and-squirrel bonanza of the suburbs, these crafty canines have now moved on to a more cosmopolitan lifestyle, prowling the late-night streets of the Windy City. (good.is)
  • They explain why it makes sense to locate a new corporate back-office campus in the Dallas area's booming northern suburbs rather than in struggling southern Dallas. (newgeography.com)
  • Brazil is the sixth-largest economy in the world, and 85 percent of its citizens are urban dwellers. (wri.org)
  • By expressing distinct functions for its citizens, FLIP/CITY relates strongly to the human scale while simultaneously increasing density and green space at the urban scale. (e-architect.com)
  • FLIP/CITY is a new urban typology that answers the needs of modern Shanghai, its economy, social structures and ecological plans for the future while embracing Shanghai's rich history and its citizens. (e-architect.com)
  • The common thread, though, involves citizens stepping up to better their surroundings, to create safer, more livable, and more environmentally sound urban environments. (shareable.net)
  • For example, by 2050 more than 40 percent of Japan's population is projected to be over 60 years old, while fewer than 9 percent will be younger than 15, according to Japanese government statistics. (asiasentinel.com)
  • Driven by high adoption rates of mobile devices, increased mobile network connectivity, and a boom in mobile payments, China's m-commerce sector jumped from 12 billion yuan ($1.9 billion) in 2011 to 828 billion yuan ($132 billion) in 2014, and comprised almost one-fifth of the overall e-commerce market. (forbes.com)
  • During this time, poverty was pervasive enough to be almost permanently entrenched in certain parts of China's rural population. (richdadeducation.com)
  • This has exacerbated the wealth division between China's urban and rural as exhibited in the Gini Coefficient, which is around 0.5, suggesting extreme inequality. (richdadeducation.com)
  • It was introduced so that population growth would not derail future economic power, but China's working age population has become so squeezed that an aging population is now a much bigger economic threat. (gcimagazine.com)
  • Rapid population growth means the city struggles to bring potable water and sewer service to parts of the population, especially on the fringes of the expanding urban area. (wikipedia.org)
  • That growth could eventually help combat the high cost of housing in California, demographic experts say, and plug the population drain. (latimes.com)
  • When it takes a decade of really massive economic growth in this state for housing production to catch up to the prerecession levels, that says as much about the depths of our production crisis as it does about some kind of recent victory," said Michael Lens, a professor of urban planning and public policy at UCLA. (latimes.com)
  • Shanghai faces problems incurred by high population density, heavy pollution, rapid growth, and decreasing viable land. (e-architect.com)
  • Shanghai's exponential population growth was incurred by its international importance as a financial epicenter. (e-architect.com)
  • For many Canadians living in urban centres, this growth comes at a cost. (cbc.ca)
  • The area of East St. Louis in Illinois experienced a surge in population growth and urban expansion in the late 1800s as the East St. Louis & Suburban Railway extended its reach in the St. Clair and Madison counties of the state. (illinois.edu)
  • With the onset of the first World War, population growth accelerated and then took off again during World War II. (urban.org)
  • These two trends shunt growth to a city's periphery and reduce density, leading to urban sprawl and increased trip lengths. (thecityfix.com)
  • An expanding urban population and deeper mobile penetration in the country should also add fuel to the industry's growth. (philstar.com)
  • As Moncton experiences growth, urban development and revitalization projects are shaping the city's landscape. (feedburner.com)
  • The core of the city developed along the north bank of the Pearl River, but urban growth has spread Guangzhou in all directions, especially to the north and south. (britannica.com)
  • This new context came out of not only the urban population boom but also the expansion of public education and the consequent rise in literacy rates, as well as the growth in the number of newspapers and magazines and their ever-increasing circulation. (wordswithoutborders.org)
  • During the first half of this century, however…the growth of agriculture failed to keep up with the needs of a population which doubled, then nearly tripled. (merip.org)
  • These two themes - the relatively fixed amount of usable land and the rapid growth of the population - will be seen as leitmotifs in the discussion of Egypt's economic problems. (merip.org)
  • Listed as a supernova city by Urban Land Institute for its sustained population and job growth, economic diversity and employment, the region is primed for business from a booming talent pipeline, competitive costs and a collaborative, pro-business culture. (myjaxchamber.com)
  • Other megatrends include urban growth. (asiasentinel.com)
  • While on the aggregate this is very impressive, it does not tell how this growth dividend is shared among the population. (lu.se)
  • However, to achieve the goal of doubling the wild tiger population by 2022, tiger range country policymakers need to make more long-term decisions that prioritise the maintenance of tiger landscapes. (dalberg.com)
  • Population decreases, and all these baby-boom postwar buildings aren't needed any more. (metafilter.com)
  • Rob Walker, a contributing analyst with Euromonitor International , wrote a blog post called " The Beauty Implications of a Chinese Baby Boom ," detailing how the Chinese baby market is taking off-and what that means for the beauty industry on a global scale. (gcimagazine.com)
  • Eventually, the two crooked officials are caught and charged, but the boom of illegal alcohol has one positive note: it sets the foundations for what will become one of the North America's largest producers of legitimate booze, and eventually the cleanup and economic boom of mid-century Montreal. (cbc.ca)
  • More than150 experts - including government officials, policymakers, and practitioners in the field of urban transport and urban planning - plan to attend the event. (thecityfix.com)
  • This brief explores insights from a Center for an Urban Future policy forum on what exactly city government officials should do to ensure that a significant share of the city's newest businesses prosper for many years to come. (nycfuture.org)
  • As a reactive healing force, this city could renew weak urban zones in decline by filling voids and dead space with functioning, thriving neighborhoods. (e-architect.com)
  • Following the 97% decline in wild tiger population over the 21st century, tiger range countries agreed during the 2010 Tiger Summit that a paradigm shift was needed in conservation action, and they set on an ambitious journey to double the number of tigers in the wild. (dalberg.com)
  • The Internet and mobile communications, then infant technologies, would make it unnecessary for people to live and work in urban concentrations. (asiaone.com)
  • People used to ask me how the urban population could benefit from the shale boom. (newpittsburghcourier.com)
  • Many people now working from home or forced to change jobs found all the perks to urban life gone. (peytonbolin.com)
  • The microfinance industry was on the rise in the 1970s when the ever-tempting era of entrepreneurship had people tempted the mass population into a frenzy of opening a start-up cost-effectively. (richdadeducation.com)
  • One reason is the exploding populations of people and animals living in close proximity. (asiasentinel.com)
  • Economically, people entering the labour market to- The population of the Arab countries youth are in transition from economic day do not have to mortgage the future has increased between 1980 and 2010, dependency to economic productiv- benefits of their work to support either rising from 170 million (3.8% of the ity. (who.int)
  • In the 1980s, the District's white population stabilized, and Latinos and Asians became a growing presence. (urban.org)
  • Because and highlight the need for action to birth rates in Arab countries remained maximize the potential benefit to the The United Nations defines youth as high until the 1980s and then declined population in this region. (who.int)
  • The city has seen a population boom in recent years, due in part to its rapidly growing economy. (dubai-online.com)
  • The population has been growing rapidly and is estimated to have doubled since 1947. (merip.org)
  • To make matters worse, China, during the same underwent a famine that killed a substantial portion of the population. (richdadeducation.com)
  • By the 1950 Census, the city had reached its peak population of over 800,000. (urban.org)
  • In 1950 only one city in East Asia exceeded a population of 10 million. (asiasentinel.com)
  • The United Nations population) [2]. (who.int)
  • The El Alto-La Paz metropolitan area, formed by La Paz, El Alto, Achocalla, Viacha, and Mecapaca, constitutes the most populous urban area of Bolivia, with a population of about 2.2 million. (wikipedia.org)
  • At the onset of the oil boom starting in the 1960s, Lebanon-based banks were the main recipients of the region's petrodollars. (lebanonembassyus.org)
  • McKinsey Global Institute estimates that 600 of the top urban centres, accounting for a fifth of world population, generate 60 per cent of global GDP. (asiaone.com)
  • Gehrt estimates the population of the coyotes to be about 2,000, and has been studying their behavior by affixing the animals with GoPro cameras. (good.is)
  • Each of these country reports focused on the experiences of a particular group of urban residents. (asiafoundation.org)
  • New York State's older adult population is booming, with more residents ages 65 and above-nearly 3.5 million-than the entire population of 21 states. (nycfuture.org)
  • On the same time, the increasing industrialization and the booming urban population in the region are expected to boost car ownership. (mordorintelligence.com)
  • The intent is to draw attention to the importance of these demographic changes and highlight the need for action to maximize the potential benefit to the population in this region. (who.int)
  • FLIP/CITY realizes this urban typology in the context of Shanghai, a prime location for sustainable innovation at an immense scale. (e-architect.com)
  • Fortunately, most urban predators have not yet developed a taste for blended alcoholic beverages or fancy coiffure, but city dwellers all over the world will still have to increasingly get used to sharing their downtown promenades and piazzas with hairy beasts of the night. (good.is)
  • New York City, determined to have the most obscure, and thus hippest urban animals, has recently seen the return of fishers, small, furry omnivorous beasts that have been spotted more and more frequently around the Bronx . (good.is)
  • The city of Dubai is a bustling metropolis that is home to a diverse population. (dubai-online.com)
  • Understandably, any such lack of progress would have to be tolerated in a city that has had to cope with mounting challenges, due to a massive increase in population, extensive urban expansion, an unprecedented construction boom and rising demands for all kinds of services. (jordantimes.com)
  • Financed by the Multidonor Sustainable Logistics Trust Fund , the tool serves as a platform to promote discussion with our counterparts on a subject that is often neglected by city planners: urban logistics. (worldbank.org)
  • Through boom times and bust, Canadians struggle to improve their lives and learn to care for others. (cbc.ca)
  • lt;p>St. John's, located in Newfoundland and Labrador, has a unique real estate landscape heavily influenced by the province's resource-based economy and its associated cycles of boom and bust. (feedburner.com)
  • By 2015, e-commerce is expected to hit 7.4% of total retail value in China and cover almost half of the urban population , thereby becoming the largest e-commerce market in the world. (forbes.com)
  • Now China is nicknamed the factory of the world with a robust economy and a highly educated and urbanized population. (richdadeducation.com)
  • Another Bay Area food-related project is Richmond Grows, a seed lending library that supports community members interested in urban agriculture. (shareable.net)
  • In any case, the discussion on urban logistics should always take the local context into account, and be as structured as possible. (worldbank.org)
  • A good first step to begin your urban experiments is to start a neighborhood work group to get your community's support, input, and resources from which to draw. (shareable.net)
  • Since 1998, the Chinese government has invested 200 billion yuan (US$24 billion) annually in urban construction. (china.org.cn)
  • Urban development planning is often characterized by a separation of land uses, such as residential from commercial. (thecityfix.com)
  • Telemedicine experienced a boom with the Space Race and development of satellite technologies, enabling healthcare to be delivered in remote locations without the presence of a doctor. (bvsalud.org)
  • The increase in immigration, however, was not enough to stop California's three largest counties from experiencing population loss yet again. (latimes.com)
  • According to a recent MasterCard Worldwide survey by economists Yuwa Hedrick-Wong and Desmond Choong, the world's top 132 urban hubs saw an estimated 30 per cent increase in international visitor arrivals and a 39 per cent increase in their cross-border spending between 2009 and 2013. (asiaone.com)
  • Most of the population increase will take place in the world's poorer countries. (bbc.co.uk)
  • Plus, urban transport's energy use and greenhouse gas emissions are set to increase almost seven-fold in the next 20 years. (thecityfix.com)
  • So how can we better manage the increase in urban freight traffic induced by e-commerce? (worldbank.org)
  • In terms of family formation, youth numerous children (as happened in the total world population) to roughly 366 are often at the stage of identifying a recent past) or the elderly (as will occur million in 2010 (about 6% of the world partner for marriage, childbearing and in the near future). (who.int)
  • The population of the Kathmandu Valley - which covers Nepal's capital as well as Lalitpur and Bhaktapur districts - is estimated at more than 2.5 million. (eco-business.com)
  • The dependency ratio-which compares the potential workforce with the population of children and retirees-rose in 2012 for the first time in 40 years. (gcimagazine.com)
  • The Chinese economy as a whole has grown massively in the last 40 years, but it did not benefit the complete population equally resulting in increased inequality and potential social tensions. (lu.se)
  • Precipitation declines combined with booming urban populations will present a significant challenge to Western water managers in the near future. (nasa.gov)
  • Colorado's booming urban population flipped the state from red to blue, allowing a referendum on reintroducing wolves to pass. (wesa.fm)
  • This means the daily capacity of Chinese urban sewage treatment plants is expected to more than double, providing great business opportunities for international companies and financial institutions. (china.org.cn)
  • Census data is collected by borough and ward so identifying the population of Woolwich is not straightforward. (wikipedia.org)
  • If the area is taken to approximate to the Woolwich Common, Woolwich Riverside and Glyndon Wards, then the population was 54,790 at the time of the 2011 census. (wikipedia.org)
  • According to the Dubai Statistics Center (part of the Government of Dubai) the current resident population of Dubai is 3,628,600 (figure last updated on Sunday 1st of October 2023) . (dubai-online.com)
  • This "youth bulge" of young, active, working-age individuals in the current population may open a demographic window for countries to benefit from increased savings and investment. (who.int)
  • Population Division has defined the has been most dramatic in the Gulf Mostly, youth is the stage of personality demographic dividend as the period Cooperation Council (GCC) states, formation and self-realization. (who.int)
  • We ran time-adjusted Cox-proportional-hazards model with sensitivity analysis accounting for varying entry into vaccinated cohort to assess vaccine effectiveness for each vaccine (measured as 1-adjusted hazard ratios) using the unvaccinated population as reference (N=565,390). (cdc.gov)
  • These aspects, of course, dominated what has been conventionally defined as the elite culture of Brazil's First Republic, encapsulated by the cultural paradigms of the European aristocracy adapted to the new carioca urban life. (wordswithoutborders.org)
  • Through walking interview, empirical materials from interviewing ex- urbanites that relocate to the countryside provide rich accounts of binary perceptions of `rural' and `urban', ex- urbanites' life experiences of expected and unexpected countryside living, and tensions regarding how farmland and the agriculture landscape should be maintained. (lu.se)