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COMPLEX TIME: Adaptation, Aging, & Arrow of Time

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A list of all pages that have property "Reference material notes" with value "- Recommended for this course (1 & 2): 1) Lee, CT, and S Tuljapurkar. 2011. Quantitative, dynamic models to integrate environment, population, and society. Pages 111-133 in Kirch, PV, ed. Roots of Conflict: Soils, Agriculture, and Sociopolitical Complexity in Ancient Hawai'i. School of Advanced Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico. ''This book chapter summarizes the effort to integrate models for the environment and environment-dependent demography that is the focus of my lecture during the course. It's intended as an introduction to and overview of the dynamic modeling approach--details are there for folks who are interested, but not necessary.'' 2) Lee, CT, S Tuljapurkar, and P Vitousek. 2006. Risky business: spatial and temporal variation in preindustrial dryland agriculture. Human Ecology 34 (6): 739-763 ''This paper goes into more detail on the environmental modeling and is optional for that reason, but its introduction does a bit better job than the book chapter of setting up the context and larger questions framing the work.'' - Supplementary readings for more detail on other parts of the project (3 - 6): 3) Lee and Tuljapurkar 2008 details food-dependent demographic dynamics when populations are in a phase of long-term exponential growth. 4) Puleston and Tuljpurkar 2008 give details of how demography changes when total land area begins to limit population growth. 5) Lee et al. 2009 examine both growing and space-limited populations with environmental variability. 6) Ladefoged et al. 2008 explains the application of the coupled model to questions about social organization.". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

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    • Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/CharlotteLee  + (- Recommended for this course (1 & 2):- Recommended for this course (1 & 2):</br></br>1) Lee, CT, and S Tuljapurkar. 2011. Quantitative, dynamic models to integrate environment, population, and society. Pages 111-133 in Kirch, PV, ed. Roots of Conflict: Soils, Agriculture, and Sociopolitical Complexity in Ancient Hawai'i. School of Advanced Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.</br></br>''This book chapter summarizes the effort to integrate models for the environment and environment-dependent demography that is the focus of my lecture during the course. It's intended as an introduction to and overview of the dynamic modeling approach--details are there for folks who are interested, but not necessary.''</br></br>2) Lee, CT, S Tuljapurkar, and P Vitousek. 2006. Risky business: spatial and temporal variation in preindustrial dryland agriculture. Human Ecology 34 (6): 739-763</br></br>''This paper goes into more detail on the environmental modeling and is optional for that reason, but its introduction does a bit better job than the book chapter of setting up the context and larger questions framing the work.''</br></br>- Supplementary readings for more detail on other parts of the project (3 - 6):</br></br>3) Lee and Tuljapurkar 2008 details food-dependent demographic dynamics when populations are in a phase of long-term exponential growth.</br></br>4) Puleston and Tuljpurkar 2008 give details of how demography changes when total land area begins to limit population growth.</br></br>5) Lee et al. 2009 examine both growing and space-limited populations with environmental variability.</br></br>6) Ladefoged et al. 2008 explains the application of the coupled model to questions about social organization. model to questions about social organization.)