Negative Population Growth:
Why We Must, and How We Could, Achieve It
John B. Hall, University of Hawaii
From Population and
Environment, Volume 18, Number 1, September 1996
Humanity has been all too successful in remodeling much of the
natural world to serve its own purposes. While this has permitted
an unprecedented increase in the number of humans that the Earth
will support, it appears that we have exceeded the limits of our
natural life-support systems and are rapidly destroying the very
resources needed to sustain our existence. We need to turn to the
conquest of one last frontier, perhaps the most difficult and
dangerous one of all, the mastery of ourselves.
A prosperous, healthy, educated, humane, and democratic form
of life for everyone would require the numbers of people
consuming the world's resources to come into some sort of
reasonable balance with those resources. A brief look at the list
of pressing world problems will make it obvious that the present
world population is already far greater than can be sustained,
even at present levels of misery, for very many more generations.
Modern economic systems have an absolute dependence on massive
utilization of fossil fuels which are being consumed at an
extravagant rate, and which, of course, are not being renewed.
Severe problems exist in finding adequate replacements for the
enormous amounts of energy represented by this rapidly
diminishing resource. Meanwhile, the carbon dioxide being
produced threatens to alter the climate of the Earth via the
greenhouse effect, with possible dramatic rises in sea level,
bleaching and destruction of coral reefs, and the inundation of
heavily populated, and often agriculturally vital, coastal areas.
Soil erosion is removing topsoil 20 to 40 times as rapidly as it
is being replenished at the same time that burgeoning populations
require more and more food, and dwindling forests are cleared to
provide the necessary extra crop land. Attempts to farm or graze
marginal lands has led to rapid desertification of vast areas.
Pollutants in the atmosphere destroy ozone and allow increasing
fluxes of ultraviolet light to reach the Earth's surface, not
only leading to increases in human skin cancer, but potentially
damaging crop plants and reducing agricultural productivity. Many
arid areas are irrigated by pumping ground water to the surface,
often at rates far in excess of natural recharge-another
short-sighted mining of a limited resource that cannot continue
for long. Most fisheries are in trouble, with many in a state of
near collapse as increasing efforts lead to less and less return,
and only a total ban on fishing for a few years will allow
recovery of some stocks. Rain forests and old growth forests at
all latitudes are rapidly being cleared in the presence of an
accelerating demand for wood products. Replanting and natural
regrowth lag far behind this destruction, another example of the
human propensity to consume resource capital even though the
income that could have been derived from it will be needed in the
future. Such drastic modifications of the natural environment are
accompanied by the extinction of innumerable species, which are
vanishing far more rapidly than they can be described and
studied.
All of this has had enormous impact on human societies.
Famine, war, ethnic strife, and disease are prevalent. Urban
ghettoes all over the world teem with people who cannot find
useful employment. And as our sympathies are overwhelmed by the
sheer mass of human suffering, we turn away from it in despair
and cease to respond to the pain of others. Our range of concern
narrows and narrows, until only those of our own race, culture,
class, and religious group command our sympathies, and we hide
behind the gates of closed, guarded communities or the boundaries
of tribe or ethnic group and reject all others. This loss of
civility impoverishes the spirit and we become indifferent to
genocide, starvation, poverty, ignorance, and want, and willing
to fight all others for the land, space, and resources needed for
the maintenance and expansion of our own group. Death squads
proliferate to murder those who are politically active or just
inconvenient, and wholesale massacres of "alien"
peoples become almost a matter of routine.
All of these things are related to the density of human
populations and competition for the resources required for their
welfare. With the present world population, many critical
resources are being rapidly exhausted, and conflicts between
peoples intensify even as unpredictable changes in climate and
other factors affecting the livability of the Earth occur.
If we value human culture, treasure civility, democracy,
education, health, and a high standard of living in general,
there is evident need for not only an end to further growth of
the Earth's population, but also an actual and substantial
decrease in the number of people the Earth is asked to support.
Many people are highly concerned about the population problem.
International conferences are held, efforts are made to persuade
world leaders of the seriousness of the problem, educational
programs are launched, and family planning services are promoted.
The rate of growth of the world population has slowed, and if
present trends continue, the population should stabilize after
"only" one or two more doublings. This will, no doubt,
postpone disaster so that it arrives a few years later than it
will if no decrease in growth rate had occurred, but will hardly
prevent it.
The necessary decrease in population size is most unlikely to
come about voluntarily. Those few countries where the birthrate
is slightly below replacement level have generally become quite
concerned and some have attempted to raise it again. No nation or
cultural group likes to believe that it is dwindling in size. No
country wants to feel that it is losing population and that its
own people might soon be replaced by fecund foreigners who are
clearly all too ready to move into its relatively
"empty" spaces. Some countries are moving to defend
borders. A decrease in world population will be peaceful only if
it affects everyone, and not just the few highly advanced
countries where it is found at present.
Rapid reduction in population size is necessary to prevent
disaster, but many cultures still value high fertility levels;
generations may be required to change these attitudes. These
generations we do not have. Most people in the population studies
field assume that individual control over reproductive decisions
is a basic human right, which can not be tampered with. Yet if
exercise of this right is leading to universal disaster, is it
not time that the possibility of modifying it was at least
considered? When the consequences of any course of action are
clearly highly destructive of human welfare, how can one maintain
that, never-the-less, people have an innate right to pursue that
course of action? I believe that we must not hinder the efforts
of governments to restrict reproductive rights among their own
people, in order to bring the human population of the Earth and
of their country into balance with the longterm carrying capacity
at the level of wellbeing that the population wishes to maintain.
It may be argued that the government machinery necessary to
monitor the reproductive decisions of individual families and the
constant interference with these decisions that would be
necessary to maintain a sub-replacement level of fertility can
not be afforded by most countries, would be inconsistent with a
democratic system of government, and if attempted, would be the
source of constant resentment and resistance. Only in highly
authoritarian countries like China is an approach to this level
of social control feasible, and even in China there appears to be
widespread evasion of the rules in many rural areas. This would
certainly be a cogent argument if a reduction of average
fertility on a global scale required the imposition of government
regulations and monitoring. However, there are alternative ways
of achieving this objective.
The immune system, which usually functions to protect us from
disease, but also is involved in allergies and the rejection of
transplanted organs, can be harnessed to contraception (Anderson
& Alexander, 1983; Aldhous, 1994). A contraceptive vaccine
has been suggested for veterinary use (Miller & Dean, 1993).
In this application, the female animal to be sterilized is
injected with preparations of the zone pellucida (the outer
envelope of the egg cell) from a different species of animal. The
injected female responds to this foreign material by producing
antibodies against it. These antibodies, however, also recognize
the different but related material on her own eggs, a process
called "cross-reaction," and attack these, destroying
them. The death of these egg cells in the ovary releases the
controls on maturation of immature egg cells and they begin to
develop. As they approach maturity, they are also recognized by
the immune system and destroyed in turn. A run-away cycle of
maturation and destruction follows, and within a few months all
of the potential egg cells in the animal's ovary have matured and
been destroyed, and the female has been nonsurgically sterilized
(Skinner, et al, 1984). Such a dramatic procedure would probably
have little application in human contraception except in rare
cases in which the person concerned wished to be sterilized, and
since it would probably induce menopause, is unlikely to be
acceptable even then. However, many less absolute contraceptive
actions can also be mediated by the immune system.
Many cases of natural infertility occur because the woman
produces antibodies against sperm which are recognized as foreign
bodies by her tissues (Bronson, et al, 1984). Vaccines could
probably be developed that would stimulate more women to produce
such antibodies with a corresponding decrease in their fertility
(Primakoff, et al, 1988; Primakoff, 1994). In yet another
approach, women have been vaccinated with peptide sequences
similar to those found in certain hormones involved in
reproduction (Talwar et al, 1993; Talwar et al, 1994). Very
effective vaccines can be produced by splicing gene segments for
the desired peptide sequences into some of the genes of the
vaccinia virus (Moss, et al, 1984; Talwar et al, 1993; Talwar et
al, 1994) and then using this virus to vaccinate the subject,
just as it was used to vaccinate against smallpox. The peptide
sequences produced by the virus stimulate antibody formation, the
antibodies would cross react with the naturally occurring hormone
in the woman's body, and reproduction could be inhibited. Many
such alternatives that harness the immune system in the service
of contraception are available.
None of these approaches would represent anything other than
an addition to the existing armory of contraceptive systems,
except for one thing: vaccinia virus is used as a vehicle for
stimulating the immune system because it grows locally in the
body, and produces an effective stimulus to the immune system,
but very rarely spreads spontaneously to other people. However,
there is no reason why the required antigens (the substances that
stimulate the immune system) could not be introduced into any
other virus, such as one of the more than 200 viruses responsible
for the common cold, that would spread spontaneously through the
population, and thus could serve as a form of infectious
contraceptive. Depending on the nature of the antigen used, and
their response to it, infected individuals would have more or
less reduced fertility levels for longer or shorter periods of
time. The effects would necessarily be uneven and it is unlikely
that all individuals or populations would be equally affected. If
a variety of antigens and viruses were used, however, these
differences would average out and the average global fertility
could be reduced to any desired level. The technology to carry
out this global fertility regulation is not visionary. All of the
knowledge and techniques that would be required are available
today. Probably the creation and release of a number of different
agents would be necessary to reach the desired level of negative
population growth, as the effect of any one would be likely to be
partial and geographically uneven due to the random accidents of
distribution and infection.
Obviously, the use of infectious contraceptive agents raises
profound moral and ethical questions, especially that of informed
consent and particularly if one assumes that choices about
reproduction are intrinsically the sole right of the couples (or
often the male partner?) concerned. However, it is quite plain
that eventually the growth of human populations will be curbed,
and almost certain that negative growth will occur, as population
overshoots even the short-range capacity of the Earth to support
it, and massive mortality from disease, famine, and genocide
takes its course.
We are in the position of a skilled hunter, perched on a
mountain ridge, who sees a bus load of children stalled on a
curve on an adjacent ridge, while a truck comes hurtling clown
the road above, oblivious to the hazard out of sight around the
curve below. The hunter has no way of communicating with either
party, but he could shoot the truck driver, or blow out a tire,
with the almost certain result that the truck will leave the road
on the next curve and plunge into the canyon, killing the driver
but sparing the bus and its occupants. This is obviously a
morally equivocal situation, yet to do nothing, though sparing
the hunter any legal responsibility for the death of the trucker,
is a morally questionable choice also, since the trucker as well
as the children will almost certainly be killed in the collision.
Similarly, failing to arrest and reverse the present growth of
human populations will almost certainly lead to a devastating
collapse in human numbers-the deaths of hundreds of millions or
billions of people is quite likely. In the process many major
ecosystems will be degraded beyond recovery, innumerable other
species will become extinct and many irreplaceable non-living,
nonrenewable resources will be exhausted. This will certainly
impair the capacity of the Earth to ever again support human
societies at a high level of culture and prosperity for any
significant number of people, while at the same time insuring
that the right to reproduce as one sees fit becomes meaningless
as people loose the means to insure their own survival, much less
to provide for the children they would like to bear. The trucker
will die, whether the hunter shoots him or not. It is Hobson's
choice, but we must accept the fact that free choice in
reproductive decisions is the one freedom we cannot, in fact,
afford, if we are to preserve any of the others.
REFERENCES
Aldhous, P. (December 2, 1994). A booster for contraceptive
vaccines. Science 266 1484-1486.
Anderson, D.J., & Alexander, N.J. (1983). A new look at
antifertility vaccines. Fertility & Sterility 40, 557-571.
Bronson, R., Cooper, G., & Rosenfeld, D. (1984). Sperm
antibodies: their role in infertility. Fertility & Sterility
42, 171 -183.
Millar, S.E., & Dean, J. (1993). Targeting the zone
pellucida for immunocontraception. In R.K. Naz (Ed.). Immunology
of reproduction, Cha. 14, pp. 293-313. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
Moss, B., Smith, G.L., Gerin, J.L., & Purcell, R.H.
(1984). Live recombinant vaccinia virus protects chimpanzees
against hepatitis B. Nature 311, 67-69.
Please address correspondence to Dr. Hall, Professor Emeritus
of Microbiology 5326 Keikilani Circle, Honolulu, HI 96821-1515.
Population and Environment: A Journal of Interdisciplinary
Studies Volume 18, Number 1, September 1996 1996 Human Sciences
Press, Inc.
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