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[working paper]

dc.contributor.authorSwanson, David A.de
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-21T08:45:48Z
dc.date.available2025-10-21T08:45:48Z
dc.date.issued2025de
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/105456
dc.description.abstractStudies that predict species extinction have focused on a range of flora and fauna but in regard to Homo sapiens there are, with one notable exception, no predictive studies, only considerations of possible ways this may occur. The exception believes extinction of Homo sapiens will happen in 10,000 years. We agree that extinction will happen, but we disagree on the timing. Given continuation of the trend in the decline in fertility between 2020 and 2025 observed for all five of the world regions recognized by the United Nations (Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe, and Oceania) and employing a "bottom-up" probabilistic projection method in conjunction with 66% confidence intervals, we find the world population will be between 2.59 and 2.82 billion by 2130; between 51.53 and 72.11 million by 2230; between 3.0 and 4.1 million by 2280; between 767.4 and 997.4 thousand by 2300; between 33,040 and 40,189 by 2360; and between 1,058 and 1,281 by 2415, whereupon the human species becomes extinct. Asia will be the first region to experience extinction (2280), Europe, the second (2295), followed closely by the Americas (2300), then Africa (2360) and finally Oceania (2415). Although there is regional variation in the reasons (the desire for fewer children, advancements in contraceptive technology, the worldwide rise in male and female infertility, the cost of having and raising children in modern and modernizing economies and the fact that populations worldwide are aging beyond the age group in which reproduction is both possible and feasible), these factors have come together such that they have resulted in the force driving extinction - declining fertility, which if not already at or near to a level too low to sustain a given regional human population, is heading there. Notably, while we likely bear more than a small level of responsibility for the possibility of a "sixth mass extinction event," we also appear to be the only species facing extinction due to internal circumstances.de
dc.languageende
dc.subject.ddcSozialwissenschaften, Soziologiede
dc.subject.ddcSocial sciences, sociology, anthropologyen
dc.subject.otherARIMA; Bayes; Cohort change ratios; cost of children; desire for children; infertilityde
dc.titleA Regionally-Based Probabilistic Forecast of Human Extinctionde
dc.description.reviewbegutachtetde
dc.description.reviewrevieweden
dc.publisher.countryUSAde
dc.subject.classozBevölkerungde
dc.subject.classozPopulation Studies, Sociology of Populationen
dc.subject.thesozBevölkerungsentwicklungde
dc.subject.thesozpopulation developmenten
dc.subject.thesozdemographische Alterungde
dc.subject.thesozdemographic agingen
dc.subject.thesozGeburtenrückgangde
dc.subject.thesozdeclining birth rateen
dc.subject.thesozWeltbevölkerungde
dc.subject.thesozworld populationen
dc.identifier.urnurn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-105456-8
dc.rights.licenceDigital Peer Publishing Licence - Basismodulde
dc.rights.licenceBasic Digital Peer Publishing Licenceen
internal.statusformal und inhaltlich fertig erschlossende
internal.identifier.thesoz10039081
internal.identifier.thesoz10035270
internal.identifier.thesoz10044687
internal.identifier.thesoz10039069
dc.type.stockmonographde
dc.type.documentArbeitspapierde
dc.type.documentworking paperen
dc.source.pageinfo36de
internal.identifier.classoz10303
internal.identifier.document3
internal.identifier.ddc300
dc.description.pubstatusPreprintde
dc.description.pubstatusPreprinten
internal.identifier.licence4
internal.identifier.pubstatus3
internal.identifier.review2
dc.subject.classhort10300de
internal.pdf.validtrue
internal.pdf.wellformedtrue
internal.pdf.encryptedfalse


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