Seite - 25 - in options, Band winter 2016/2017
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asia
25winter
2016/2017 +
optionswww.iiasa.ac.at
regional focus
Parents still prefer boys, but less so
In many parts of the world, couples prefer to have sons,
rather than daughters. This trait is especially true in East,
Central, and South Asia where patriarchal traditions prevail
and sons contribute more to economic production and provide
more financial support to parents in old age, especially in
agricultural societies. While South Korea was among the first countries to report an
abnormally high sex ratio at birth (SRB), it was also one of the
first to report a restoration of this ratio to normal (105 males
per 100Â
females). IIASA researchers have investigated the origins
of this change by analyzing data from the National Survey on
Fertility, Family Health and Welfare that spans from 1991 to 2012.
While the preference for sons declined to a great
extent during this period it still exists. For example,
parents who had two female children were more likely
to choose to have a third child than those who had
two sons. The study’s findings indicate that the rapid
changes in the preference for sons were less due to
changes in individual characteristics, such as parental
education, employment, and urban residence, and
more due to changes in the cultural, economic, and
institutional environment. An underlying preference
for sons still remains in the Korean population,
although parents do not practice sex‑selective
abortion any more. “Parents still want to have a
son, but at least there are no more missing girls,”
says IIASA researcher Sam Hyun Yoo. JP
Further info Yoo SH, Hayford SR, Agadjanian V (2016). Old habits
die hard? Lingering son preference in an era of normalizing sex ratios
at birth in South Korea. Population Research and Policy Review
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/13387].
Sam Hyun Yoo yoosam@iiasa.ac.at
Climate change threatens Iran’s great salt lake
Lake Urmia, located in Iran near the border to Turkey,
was once the world’s second‑largest hypersaline lake,
but has declined over 80% in recent decades. In a
recent study, IIASA researcher Somaya Shadkam found
that the lake’s decline is linked to a combination of
climate change and water usage for irrigation.
The lake is an important ecological area for Iran and
the region, home to many species, and the Urmia basin
supports a growing amount of agriculture. As the water
level has declined, the water has become even more saline,
leading to impacts on ecosystems, agriculture, health,
and tourism.
Yet even in the most optimistic climate change scenario
and without any further human impact, climate change is
likely to worsen the situation of the Lake Urmia, according
to another recent study by Shadkam published in the
journal Science of the Total Environment. The study,
which examined the future prospects for the lake, also finds
that a proposed plan to rescue the lake will not be sufficient,
given the impacts of climate change.
“This means that urgent actions are needed to save theÂ
lake.
We need both regional action to limit human water use,
and global action to limit greenhouse gas concentration,”
says Shadkam. KL Further info Shadkam S, Ludwig F, van Vliet MTH, Pastor A, Kabat P (2016).
Preserving the world second largest hypersaline lake under future irrigation
and climate change. Science of the Total Environment 559:317–325
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/12811].
§ Shadkam S, Ludwig F, van Oel P, Kirmit C, Kabat P (2016). Impacts of climate
change and water resources development plans on the declining inflow into
Iran’s Lake Urmia. Journal of Great Lakes Research [pure.iiasa.ac.at/13864].
Somayeh Shadkam shadkam@iiasa.ac.at
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band winter 2016/2017"
options
Band winter 2016/2017
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2016/2017
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2016
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine