globalvillage1

 

Lifespans of Different Countries

Page history last edited by Isaac 1 yr ago

Life Spans and Ages

 

By Isaac and Amos

 

This page is about the life spans and ages of people in the world. As you saw on the FrontPage, this project is based on the book If The World Were A Village by David J. Smith. In this book, the world is reduced to a village of 100 people, with one person equalling about 64 million people. This is done to make numbers easier to comprehend, and make percentages easier to understand. Therefore, with so many people in the real world compared to the Global Village, the numbers have to be rounded to make them work in the Global Village. In this Wiki, we aim to go over and above the data in the book. ~ Pete and Katherine

 

Death and Population Maps of the world.  The bigger areas on the top map show greater numbers of death; and the bottom map shows greater population.

 

November 1, 2007—Africa appears to swell like a balloon when the world is mapped according to

how many people died in 2002 due to diseases and other conditions that are largely preventable (top).

The continent appears much smaller by contrast in a map that sizes the countries of the world

according to their shares of the human population (bottom).

 

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Life Spans of Humans in Different Countries

 

Here we have a graph showing the average life span of people living in each country. In the many countries of Africa, the inhabitants live amazingly short lives. This is because of how poor countries in Africa are, which could be helped if more countries in Africa started becoming industrialized. This would be bad, though, because it would increase pollution. Japan has the highest average life span of countries with averages over 80 years. Is this significant? It could be.

The most common cause for the shorter life spans of countries such as the countries of Africa is money. People with less money have less health care than "richer" people. They also have less education, shelter, food, and water. Without these basic needs, people die. Also, some people think that Japan's higher life spans are because of Japan's economy and the country's diet.

Have you noticed that people in Canada and France and some other countries have higher life expectancies than people in the US? This is because of the countries' social medicine. People in these countries can go to the doctor any time they want to. These countries rely on the interdependence of the doctors and people. Another interseting fact is that the life expectancy of an average person in the US just one hundred years ago was the same as most countries in Africa now, 45-50 years. To live for more than 50 years was considered living to be very old.

 

Dr. Lleras-Muney did some research on life spans and found that more education can result in a longer life. There are a lot of problems with this theory but it is generally true. It was proved that in the US, the life expectancy for a 35-year-old can be increased by one and a half years just by going to school for one extra year!

Below is an awesome graph showing average life spans in different countries.

 

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This is the key for the graph in case you can't read the one on the actual graph.^

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Age

A village of 100 people isn't very much, so the people in the book are considered by their ages in tens. So I’m going to explain this blurb as well as I can.

The world is full of young people. That means that the global village is too. There are 3,805,648 people in the U.S. alone that are under one year of age. Why do we care? Well, if there are some poorly-living people in the world, that means that children are doing a lot of work.

This isn't bad. We can't control it. If we were animals we would have the balanced birth/death rate humans need. That doesn't mean we should try to die as soon as we can, though! So don't jump of a bridge! Please don't.

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Below is a graph of the ages in tens in the Global Village.


 

 


 

 

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Comments (24)

Shoshie said

at 12:13 pm on Feb 6, 2008

Really cool!

isaac said

at 10:30 pm on Feb 6, 2008

Thanks Shoshie!

Amos said

at 11:21 am on Feb 7, 2008

The best page ever is this one!

Isaac said

at 11:24 am on Feb 7, 2008

Sweet!

May said

at 12:09 pm on Feb 13, 2008

The stuff on is spelled wrong. So fix that, but the page is over all pretty good.

shoshie the shoshie said

at 12:21 pm on Feb 13, 2008

I agree with may. I mean, that the page is pretty good. I noticed taht it took a while for the pictures and ggraphs to load, so maybe you could do somethig about that

Isaac said

at 9:40 am on Feb 15, 2008

Okay!

pete said

at 10:13 am on Feb 15, 2008

Cool, you should put a comment on this page link.

Amos said

at 11:04 am on Feb 22, 2008

Does anyone else have constructive criticism? we need sum.

Maggie-May said

at 11:11 am on Feb 25, 2008

COOL!

Andrea Bittle said

at 5:40 pm on Mar 1, 2008

Just wondering - is this a correct title for this page? Is it the lifespan of the "country" you're talking about?

Amos said

at 12:08 pm on Mar 3, 2008

A Bittle, we cannot change "Lifespans of Different Countries," or the name. If we do, we will lose everything. The title on our page, though, is "Life Spans and Ages."

P.S. It is "life spans," not "lifespans."

Kelly said

at 12:12 pm on Mar 3, 2008

Great page. I especially liked the two maps at the top. If you look at both, India looks like it's been eating at Mcdonalds for a few years straight. That means high birth and death rates. But higher birth.

Isaac said

at 9:26 am on Mar 4, 2008

A Bittle, we cannot change the name of the page. i wish we could, but pbwiki will not let us do that!

na\'im said

at 1:47 pm on Mar 4, 2008

This page is one of the best. I really like it. I like how you talk about the graphs you had. I think that other pages need some help on that

na\'im said

at 1:48 pm on Mar 4, 2008

By the way Shoshie they can't do anything about that

Da Niel said

at 2:11 pm on Mar 4, 2008

In your graph, you wrote cildren instead of children.

Isaac said

at 2:18 pm on Mar 4, 2008

Sorry, Daniel. I cannot do anything about it now!

Rachel said

at 6:43 pm on Mar 5, 2008

I really like all of the graphs on your page! It catches the readers attention and gives a lot of information! Keep it up!

The Languages Dude (peet) said

at 9:25 am on Mar 7, 2008

Yos, i tink you can chnge the name of th page. If you need help, come ask me.

Emipoo said

at 9:42 am on Mar 7, 2008

I really like the graphs but I think you need to add more text

Isaac said

at 11:44 am on Mar 7, 2008

No cando bro pete

Isaac said

at 11:47 am on Mar 7, 2008

Sorry Emipoo no cando!

Jiyu said

at 1:23 pm on Mar 30, 2008

Wait a sec, what is the religions graph doing on your page????!

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