Jump to content

Michael Teitelbaum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 137.28.55.114 (talk) at 21:39, 2 August 2010 (→‎Notes). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Michael S. Teitelbaum is a demographer at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation in New York City.

He publishes on immigration issues in both the popular and academic press and served as Commissioner to the U.S. Commission for the Study of International Migration and Cooperative Economic Development (1988-90) and the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform (1996-1997) under Barbara Jordan.

Teitelbaum was an undergraduate degree at Reed College and later a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, where he earned his D.Phil in demography.[1]

Selected bibliography

  • Political Demography, Demographic Engineering (Berghahn Books, 2001, co-author)
  • A Question of Numbers: High Migration, Low Fertility, and the Politics of National Identity (Hill and Wang, 1998, co-author)
  • Threatened Peoples, Threatened Borders (W.W. Norton,1995, co-editor);
  • Population and Resources in Western Intellectual Traditions (Cambridge University Press, 1989, co-editor);
  • The Fear of Population Decline (Academic Books ,1985, co-author);
  • Latin Migration North: The Problem for U.S. Foreign Policy (Council on Foreign Relations, 1985);
  • The British Fertility Decline: Demographic Transition in the Crucible of the Industrial Revolution (Princeton University Press, 1984).

Notes

  1. ^ "Lecture 11". Open Yale Courses. 2009-02-19. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |publication= ignored (help)