Demography and cultural ecology of the Atlas Mountains of Morocco: some new hypotheses
High-altitude Tibetan populations in the remote Himalaya: social transformation and its demographic, economic, and ecological consequences
From a mountain-rural to a plains-urban society: implications of the 1981 Nepalese Census
Population pressure, mobility, and socio-economic change in mountainous environments: regions of refuge in comparative perspective
This paper examines demographic and socioeconomic forces in high isolated parts of the world. These regions were not always isolated; they were once the centers of their own particular worlds which, in some cases, were complex civilizations. It is their relegation to the very periphery of the modern world that is the principal theme of this paper. Population migration, both into and out of these areas, has played a vital role in linking mountainous regions to the wider world. Particular attention is paid to the part played by the traditional mobility patterns and by the resource base of the mountains in the transformation of integral, self-sufficient cultures into dependent, subservient part-cultures, the regions of refuge. The effect of population pressure and the development of outmigration from the Andes of Peru is examined first and the analysis extended to the highlands of Papua-New Guinea and to several regions in the Himalayan arc to provide the background for a comparative study of regions of refuge.
Population characteristics of the Himalayan region
"The population of the Himalayan region has tripled between 1901 and 1981 (from 11 to 33 million) and the rate of increase accelerated after about 1951 (from 1.26 to 2.7 percent per annum). These generalized figures, however, conceal significant sub-regional differences. It is argued that aid and development programmes have so far paid insufficient attention to local socio-cultural institutions and environmental conditions, and especially to the status of women." (SUMMARY IN FRE AND GER)
Population change in the upper Braldu Valley, Baltistan, 1900-1990: all is not as it seems