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Ansley J. Coale

Ansley Johnson Coale (November 14, 1917 – November 5, 2002), was one of America's foremost demographers. A native to Baltimore, Maryland, he earned his Bachelor of Arts in 1939, his Master of Arts in 1941, and (after a period of service in the Navy) his Ph.D. in 1947, all at Princeton University.[1] A long-term director of the Office of Population Research at Princeton, Coale was especially influential for his work on the demographic transition and for his leadership of the European Fertility Project.[2]

Ansley J. Coale
Born(1917-11-14)November 14, 1917
DiedNovember 5, 2002(2002-11-05) (aged 84)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materPrinceton University
Scientific career
FieldsDemography
Sociology
InstitutionsPrinceton University
ThesisThe Social and Economic Problems of Reducing Vulnerability to Atomic Bombs (1947)
Doctoral advisorsFrank W. Notestein
Frank Dunstone Graham
Doctoral studentsSamuel H. Preston
Thomas Espenshade

Early childhood and education edit

Ansley Coale was the youngest of three children born from Nellie and James Coale. One year after he was born, his family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where he spent most of his early years receiving an "excellent" education.[3]

The Coale family moved to Annapolis, Maryland, in 1928. Ansley Coale attended a public high school starting in 1930. His intentions were to enroll in Princeton University like his older brother, Jim, did in 1933. By the time Ansley was 16 years old, he was ready to graduate high school. After an extra year at the Mercersburg Academy, a preparatory school, he was accepted into Princeton. This extra year of education was not only important for his intellectual development, but he ended up having 18 companions from the academy that also went to Princeton.[3]

After he obtained his Bachelor's of Arts (BA) and master's degree in economics, Ansley Coale was offered a fellowship by the director of the Office of Population Research, Frank Notestein, as long as demography was a field of study. Over the years, the two of them became well-known demographers.[3] In 1947, six years after he received his master's degree, Ansley Coale obtained his Ph.D.[4]

Works edit

In addition to being the William Church Osborne Professor of Public Affairs Emeritus and professor of economics emeritus at Princeton University, Coale was a prolific author, publishing more than 125 books and articles on a wide variety of demographic topics. His Growth and Structure of Human Populations (1972) is considered an essential textbook for those interested in formal demography.[5] He also trained and served as a mentor to many students who would become leaders in the field.

Coale joined the faculty at Princeton in 1947, the same year he received his Ph.D. at the same site. He spent his entire academic career at the University's Office of Population Research, serving as director from 1959 to 1975. He was president of the Population Association of America in 1967–68 and president of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP) from 1977 to 1981.[5]

Coale's first major influential work was Population Growth and Economic Development in Low-Income Countries (1958), which he co-wrote with Edgar Hoover. The results, which showed that slowing population growth could enhance economic development, had a major impact on public policy and set the research agenda in this field.

This study was followed by Regional Model Life Tables and Stable Populations (1966), which he co-wrote with Paul Demeny. These model life tables both established new empirical regularities and proved invaluable in the development of later techniques for estimating mortality and fertility in populations with inaccurate or incomplete data. Along with William Brass, Coale pioneered the development and use of these techniques, first explained in Methods of Estimating Basic Demographic Measures From Incomplete Data (1967, with Demeny) and in The Demography of Tropical Africa (1968, with other demographers).

Perhaps Coale's most major scientific contribution was to the understanding of the demographic transition. The Demographic Transition, as stated by Coale, occurs when a country develops a strong economy, and within the society, low fertility and mortality will start to reflect based upon the economic standpoint.[6] Coale was the pioneer of the European Fertility Project, which examined the decline in marital fertility in Europe. The European Fertility Project's goal was to correlate the fertility rates within married couples with the rate of infant mortality.[7] Coale established three pre-conditions to fertility decline. The first is "within the conscious of choice." In other words, it is up to the individual and within their own decision whether or not to have children. The second is that if a society sees not having children as advantageous, then fertility will decline. The third pre-condition is to have contraception methods ready. It is important to emphasize that a society will start to show signs of fertility decline if these three pre-conditions are met.[8]

Initiated in 1963, the project resulted in the publication of nine major books summarizing the change in childbearing over a century in the 700 provinces in Europe. The Project findings eventually led to the conclusion that even though economical factors can play a role in fertility decline, this is not the absolute determinant of fertility decline. The European Fertility Project led to a better understanding that infant mortality and fertility decline do not necessarily follow each other.

With a long-time interest in the population of Russia, which first found outlet in Coale's work on the life tables that he constructed for Frank Lorimer's classic The Population of the Soviet Union (1946), Coale also later co-authored a volume on Russia for the European Fertility Project series.[9]

Toward the end of his career, Coale became interested in the population changes in China and understanding the fertility transition there as well as factors affecting the sex ratio at birth. In a 1986 study he conducted, India and China were compared in both their population size and fertility trends. A survey named the "1/1000 Fertility Survey" reached out to women living in various provinces of China and asked them to relate a brief history of their marital status and a family planning discussion. The survey contributed to an understanding of the population and fertility changes that would occur in China shortly after.[10] Published in a Journal article called Population trends in China and India, Coale introduced the possible causes of differences in fertility trends in such highly populated countries. These reasons are based on policies put in place to reduce birth rates as well as some cultural differences that come into play. Finally, Coale presents the future of both countries and states that despite the efforts to reduce birth rates, the countries will remain the most populated.[11]

Honors edit

Coale was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society, and was a recipient of several honorary degrees from universities including Princeton, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Louvain and the University of Liège. He was also a corresponding fellow of the British Academy.

Selected bibliography edit

  • Coale, Ansley J. (1967). “Factors associated with the development of low fertility: An historic summary,” in United Nations, Proceedings of the World Population Conference, Belgrade, 30 August–10 September 1965. Vol. 2. New York: United Nations: 205–9.
  • ——— (1969). “The decline of fertility in Europe from the French Revolution to World War II,” in S. J. Behrman and Leslie Corsa, Eds. Fertility and Family Planning: A World View. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press: 3–24.
  • ——— (1971). “Age patterns at marriage.” Population Studies 25: 193–214.
  • ——— (1972). The Growth and Structure of Human Populations: A Mathematical Investigation. Princeton, Princeton University Press.
  • ——— (1978). "Population Growth and Economic Development: The Case of Mexico." Foreign Affairs 56(2): 415-429.
  • ——— (1984). Rapid Population Change in China, 1952-1982. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
  • ——— (1991). "Excess Female Mortality and the Balance of the Sexes in the Population: An Estimate of the Number of "Missing Females," Population and Development Review 17(3): 517-523.
  • ——— (1992). “Age of entry into marriage and the date of the initiation of voluntary birth control.” Demography 29: 333–41.
  • ——— (1996). "Age Patterns and Time Sequence of Mortality in National Populations with the Highest Expectation of Life at Birth." Population and Development Review 22.
  • ——— (1996). "Five Decades of Missing Females in China," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 140 (4): 421-450.
  • Coale, Ansley J., Barbara A. Anderson, and Erna Härm (1979). Human Fertility in Russia since the Nineteenth Century. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Coale, Ansley J., and Paul Demeny (1966). Regional Model Life Tables and Stable Populations. New York: Academic Press.
  • Coale, Ansley J., and Edgar M. Hoover (1958). Population Growth and Economic Development in Low Income Countries. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Coale, Ansley J.; Stephan, Frederick F. (1962). "The Case of the Indians and the Teen-Age Widows". Journal of the American Statistical Association. 57 (298): 338–347. doi:10.1080/01621459.1962.10480663. PMID 12335707.
  • Coale, Ansley J., and Roy Treadway (1986). “A summary of the changing distribution of overall fertility, marital fertility, and the proportion married in the provinces of Europe,” in Ansley J. Coale and Susan Cotts Watkins, Eds. The Decline of Fertility in Europe. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press: 31–181.
  • Coale, Ansley J.; Trussell, James T. (1974). "Model fertility schedules: Variations in the age structure of childbearing in human populations". Population Index. 40 (2): 185–258. doi:10.2307/2733910. JSTOR 2733910. PMID 12333625.
  • ——— (1975). “A new method of estimating standard fertility measures from incomplete data.” Population Index 41: 182–210.
  • ——— (1978). “Finding the two parameters that specify a model schedule of marital fertility rates.” Population Index 44: 203–13.
  • Coale, Ansley J., and Susan Cotts Watkins, Eds. (1986). The Decline of Fertility in Europe. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Coale, Ansley J., and Melvin Zelnik (1963). New Estimates of Fertility and Population in the United States: A Study of Annual White Births from 1855 to 1960 and of Completeness of Enumeration in the Censuses from 1880 to 1960. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Horiuchi, Shiro; Coale, Ansley J. (1982). "A simple equation for estimating the expectation of life at old ages". Population Studies. 36 (2): 317–326. doi:10.2307/2174203. JSTOR 2174203. PMID 22077276.
  • ——— (1990). "Age patterns of mortality for older women: an analysis using age-specific rate of mortality change with age." Mathematical Population Studies 2(4): 245-267.
  • Preston, Samuel H.; Coale, Ansley J. (1982). "Age Structure, Growth, Attrition and Accession: A New Synthesis". Population Index. 50 (2): 214–226.
  • Trussell, James, Ansley J. Coale, Paul Demeny, and Geoffrey McNicoll (Eds.). 2003. The Encyclopedia of Population. New York, Macmillan Reference USA, Vol. 1, 132-313.

References edit

  1. ^ Princeton Weekly Bulletin 92, No. 10 (Nov. 18, 2002). This is the original source of the biographical summary and is entered into Wikipedia based on the following statement in the Bulletin: "Permission is given to adapt, reprint or excerpt material from the Bulletin for use in other media."
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-04-11. Retrieved 2007-11-14.
  3. ^ a b c Coale, Ansley J. (2000). Ansley J. Coale: An Autobiography. American Philosophical Society. p. 9. ISBN 9780871692368. ansley coale education.
  4. ^ Ansley J. Coale | Biographical Memoirs: Volume 87 | The National Academies Press. 2006. doi:10.17226/11522. ISBN 978-0-309-09579-2.
  5. ^ a b "Ansley J. Coale on Increases in Expectation of Life and Population Growth". Population and Development Review. 29 (1): 113–120. March 2003. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2003.00113.x.
  6. ^ Coale, AJ (1984). "The Demographic Transition -as stated by Coale- occurs when a country develops a strong economy and within the society, low fertility and mortality will start to reflect based upon the economic standpoint". Pakistan Development Review. 23 (4): 531–52. doi:10.30541/v23i4pp.531-552. PMID 12280194.
  7. ^ F, Van de Walle. "Infant mortality and the European demographic transition". K4Health. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  8. ^ Haines, Michael R. (1 January 1989). "Social Class Differentials during Fertility Decline: England and Wales Revisited". Population Studies. 43 (2): 305–323. doi:10.1080/0032472031000144136. JSTOR 2174269. PMID 11621872.
  9. ^ Frank Lorimer, The Population of the Soviet Union: History and Prospects (Geneva: League of Nations, 1946).
  10. ^ Coale, Ansley J.; Freedman, Ronald (1986). "Demography of China". Science. 231 (4739): 659–660. doi:10.1126/science.231.4739.659-a. JSTOR 1696284. PMID 17800785.
  11. ^ Coale, Ansley J (December 1982). "Population trends in China and India (A Review)" (PDF). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 80 (6): 1757–1763. doi:10.1073/pnas.80.6.1757. PMC 393684. PMID 16593293. Retrieved 5 April 2017.

External links edit

  • Ansley J. Coale Papers at the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Princeton University
  • Thomas J. Espenshade, James Trussell, and Charles F. Westoff, "Ansley J. Coale", Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences (2005)

ansley, coale, ansley, johnson, coale, november, 1917, november, 2002, america, foremost, demographers, native, baltimore, maryland, earned, bachelor, arts, 1939, master, arts, 1941, after, period, service, navy, 1947, princeton, university, long, term, direct. Ansley Johnson Coale November 14 1917 November 5 2002 was one of America s foremost demographers A native to Baltimore Maryland he earned his Bachelor of Arts in 1939 his Master of Arts in 1941 and after a period of service in the Navy his Ph D in 1947 all at Princeton University 1 A long term director of the Office of Population Research at Princeton Coale was especially influential for his work on the demographic transition and for his leadership of the European Fertility Project 2 Ansley J CoaleBorn 1917 11 14 November 14 1917Baltimore MarylandDiedNovember 5 2002 2002 11 05 aged 84 Newtown Bucks County PennsylvaniaNationalityAmericanAlma materPrinceton UniversityScientific careerFieldsDemographySociologyInstitutionsPrinceton UniversityThesisThe Social and Economic Problems of Reducing Vulnerability to Atomic Bombs 1947 Doctoral advisorsFrank W NotesteinFrank Dunstone GrahamDoctoral studentsSamuel H PrestonThomas Espenshade Contents 1 Early childhood and education 2 Works 3 Honors 4 Selected bibliography 5 References 6 External linksEarly childhood and education editAnsley Coale was the youngest of three children born from Nellie and James Coale One year after he was born his family moved to Cleveland Ohio where he spent most of his early years receiving an excellent education 3 The Coale family moved to Annapolis Maryland in 1928 Ansley Coale attended a public high school starting in 1930 His intentions were to enroll in Princeton University like his older brother Jim did in 1933 By the time Ansley was 16 years old he was ready to graduate high school After an extra year at the Mercersburg Academy a preparatory school he was accepted into Princeton This extra year of education was not only important for his intellectual development but he ended up having 18 companions from the academy that also went to Princeton 3 After he obtained his Bachelor s of Arts BA and master s degree in economics Ansley Coale was offered a fellowship by the director of the Office of Population Research Frank Notestein as long as demography was a field of study Over the years the two of them became well known demographers 3 In 1947 six years after he received his master s degree Ansley Coale obtained his Ph D 4 Works editIn addition to being the William Church Osborne Professor of Public Affairs Emeritus and professor of economics emeritus at Princeton University Coale was a prolific author publishing more than 125 books and articles on a wide variety of demographic topics His Growth and Structure of Human Populations 1972 is considered an essential textbook for those interested in formal demography 5 He also trained and served as a mentor to many students who would become leaders in the field Coale joined the faculty at Princeton in 1947 the same year he received his Ph D at the same site He spent his entire academic career at the University s Office of Population Research serving as director from 1959 to 1975 He was president of the Population Association of America in 1967 68 and president of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population IUSSP from 1977 to 1981 5 Coale s first major influential work was Population Growth and Economic Development in Low Income Countries 1958 which he co wrote with Edgar Hoover The results which showed that slowing population growth could enhance economic development had a major impact on public policy and set the research agenda in this field This study was followed by Regional Model Life Tables and Stable Populations 1966 which he co wrote with Paul Demeny These model life tables both established new empirical regularities and proved invaluable in the development of later techniques for estimating mortality and fertility in populations with inaccurate or incomplete data Along with William Brass Coale pioneered the development and use of these techniques first explained in Methods of Estimating Basic Demographic Measures From Incomplete Data 1967 with Demeny and in The Demography of Tropical Africa 1968 with other demographers Perhaps Coale s most major scientific contribution was to the understanding of the demographic transition The Demographic Transition as stated by Coale occurs when a country develops a strong economy and within the society low fertility and mortality will start to reflect based upon the economic standpoint 6 Coale was the pioneer of the European Fertility Project which examined the decline in marital fertility in Europe The European Fertility Project s goal was to correlate the fertility rates within married couples with the rate of infant mortality 7 Coale established three pre conditions to fertility decline The first is within the conscious of choice In other words it is up to the individual and within their own decision whether or not to have children The second is that if a society sees not having children as advantageous then fertility will decline The third pre condition is to have contraception methods ready It is important to emphasize that a society will start to show signs of fertility decline if these three pre conditions are met 8 Initiated in 1963 the project resulted in the publication of nine major books summarizing the change in childbearing over a century in the 700 provinces in Europe The Project findings eventually led to the conclusion that even though economical factors can play a role in fertility decline this is not the absolute determinant of fertility decline The European Fertility Project led to a better understanding that infant mortality and fertility decline do not necessarily follow each other With a long time interest in the population of Russia which first found outlet in Coale s work on the life tables that he constructed for Frank Lorimer s classic The Population of the Soviet Union 1946 Coale also later co authored a volume on Russia for the European Fertility Project series 9 Toward the end of his career Coale became interested in the population changes in China and understanding the fertility transition there as well as factors affecting the sex ratio at birth In a 1986 study he conducted India and China were compared in both their population size and fertility trends A survey named the 1 1000 Fertility Survey reached out to women living in various provinces of China and asked them to relate a brief history of their marital status and a family planning discussion The survey contributed to an understanding of the population and fertility changes that would occur in China shortly after 10 Published in a Journal article called Population trends in China and India Coale introduced the possible causes of differences in fertility trends in such highly populated countries These reasons are based on policies put in place to reduce birth rates as well as some cultural differences that come into play Finally Coale presents the future of both countries and states that despite the efforts to reduce birth rates the countries will remain the most populated 11 Honors editCoale was a member of the National Academy of Sciences the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society and was a recipient of several honorary degrees from universities including Princeton the University of Pennsylvania the University of Louvain and the University of Liege He was also a corresponding fellow of the British Academy Selected bibliography editCoale Ansley J 1967 Factors associated with the development of low fertility An historic summary in United Nations Proceedings of the World Population Conference Belgrade 30 August 10 September 1965 Vol 2 New York United Nations 205 9 1969 The decline of fertility in Europe from the French Revolution to World War II in S J Behrman and Leslie Corsa Eds Fertility and Family Planning A World View Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 3 24 1971 Age patterns at marriage Population Studies 25 193 214 1972 The Growth and Structure of Human Populations A Mathematical Investigation Princeton Princeton University Press 1978 Population Growth and Economic Development The Case of Mexico Foreign Affairs 56 2 415 429 1984 Rapid Population Change in China 1952 1982 Washington D C National Academy Press 1991 Excess Female Mortality and the Balance of the Sexes in the Population An Estimate of the Number of Missing Females Population and Development Review 17 3 517 523 1992 Age of entry into marriage and the date of the initiation of voluntary birth control Demography 29 333 41 1996 Age Patterns and Time Sequence of Mortality in National Populations with the Highest Expectation of Life at Birth Population and Development Review 22 1996 Five Decades of Missing Females in China Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 140 4 421 450 Coale Ansley J Barbara A Anderson and Erna Harm 1979 Human Fertility in Russia since the Nineteenth Century Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Coale Ansley J and Paul Demeny 1966 Regional Model Life Tables and Stable Populations New York Academic Press Coale Ansley J and Edgar M Hoover 1958 Population Growth and Economic Development in Low Income Countries Princeton Princeton University Press Coale Ansley J Stephan Frederick F 1962 The Case of the Indians and the Teen Age Widows Journal of the American Statistical Association 57 298 338 347 doi 10 1080 01621459 1962 10480663 PMID 12335707 Coale Ansley J and Roy Treadway 1986 A summary of the changing distribution of overall fertility marital fertility and the proportion married in the provinces of Europe in Ansley J Coale and Susan Cotts Watkins Eds The Decline of Fertility in Europe Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 31 181 Coale Ansley J Trussell James T 1974 Model fertility schedules Variations in the age structure of childbearing in human populations Population Index 40 2 185 258 doi 10 2307 2733910 JSTOR 2733910 PMID 12333625 1975 A new method of estimating standard fertility measures from incomplete data Population Index 41 182 210 1978 Finding the two parameters that specify a model schedule of marital fertility rates Population Index 44 203 13 Coale Ansley J and Susan Cotts Watkins Eds 1986 The Decline of Fertility in Europe Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Coale Ansley J and Melvin Zelnik 1963 New Estimates of Fertility and Population in the United States A Study of Annual White Births from 1855 to 1960 and of Completeness of Enumeration in the Censuses from 1880 to 1960 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Horiuchi Shiro Coale Ansley J 1982 A simple equation for estimating the expectation of life at old ages Population Studies 36 2 317 326 doi 10 2307 2174203 JSTOR 2174203 PMID 22077276 1990 Age patterns of mortality for older women an analysis using age specific rate of mortality change with age Mathematical Population Studies 2 4 245 267 Preston Samuel H Coale Ansley J 1982 Age Structure Growth Attrition and Accession A New Synthesis Population Index 50 2 214 226 Trussell James Ansley J Coale Paul Demeny and Geoffrey McNicoll Eds 2003 The Encyclopedia of Population New York Macmillan Reference USA Vol 1 132 313 References edit Princeton Weekly Bulletin 92 No 10 Nov 18 2002 This is the original source of the biographical summary and is entered into Wikipedia based on the following statement in the Bulletin Permission is given to adapt reprint or excerpt material from the Bulletin for use in other media European Fertility Project Introduction and Overview Archived from the original on 2013 04 11 Retrieved 2007 11 14 a b c Coale Ansley J 2000 Ansley J Coale An Autobiography American Philosophical Society p 9 ISBN 9780871692368 ansley coale education Ansley J Coale Biographical Memoirs Volume 87 The National Academies Press 2006 doi 10 17226 11522 ISBN 978 0 309 09579 2 a b Ansley J Coale on Increases in Expectation of Life and Population Growth Population and Development Review 29 1 113 120 March 2003 doi 10 1111 j 1728 4457 2003 00113 x Coale AJ 1984 The Demographic Transition as stated by Coale occurs when a country develops a strong economy and within the society low fertility and mortality will start to reflect based upon the economic standpoint Pakistan Development Review 23 4 531 52 doi 10 30541 v23i4pp 531 552 PMID 12280194 F Van de Walle Infant mortality and the European demographic transition K4Health Retrieved 28 March 2017 Haines Michael R 1 January 1989 Social Class Differentials during Fertility Decline England and Wales Revisited Population Studies 43 2 305 323 doi 10 1080 0032472031000144136 JSTOR 2174269 PMID 11621872 Frank Lorimer The Population of the Soviet Union History and Prospects Geneva League of Nations 1946 Coale Ansley J Freedman Ronald 1986 Demography of China Science 231 4739 659 660 doi 10 1126 science 231 4739 659 a JSTOR 1696284 PMID 17800785 Coale Ansley J December 1982 Population trends in China and India A Review PDF Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 80 6 1757 1763 doi 10 1073 pnas 80 6 1757 PMC 393684 PMID 16593293 Retrieved 5 April 2017 External links editAnsley J Coale Papers at the Seeley G Mudd Manuscript Library Princeton University Thomas J Espenshade James Trussell and Charles F Westoff Ansley J Coale Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ansley J Coale amp oldid 1173301854, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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