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i isdale, increasi, i ccording to Tisda ing di, interaction. us aspects of urbanisation,, , ! icuo', Rr the most conspic! ., population eee oe on the other hand, postulates that urbanisation ,, The demographic q, , i ntration, an argument briefly mentioned at, a a process of Fm rar is only given to two main variables, mee, outset of this 5 Hi, population purer Se rcent on eaninct be Brought Down te ape, % ae a process of population ee ee two way: cn, multiplications of points of concentration and Pea oe of individu, concentration. The demographic concept of ie ee to be quit, usable in economic history, such as in dividing the oa jenci Population into, rural and urban growth, and in measuring the shifts within em. This process couid, developments. Thus, links have been made, , then be functionally matched to other, between urbanisation and economic growth, and between urbanisation anq, industrialisation. Research into this usually involved the use of models and of, , statistics on a national level. Thus, figures concerning the distribution of population, were related to figures concerning the growth of production or the growth of labour, force in the secondary sector., , 2) The ecological complex A framework that Is too large : By, The claims to be able to isolate urbanisation from the too limited demographic, , context by relating it to environment, technology and ‘social organisation’, This, quartet together forms the ecological complex. It roughly entails that increasing, populations adjust themselves to the circumstances, specifically speaking, to, environment, by way of technology and social organisation. The establishment of, towns is one of these adjustments. Asurbanisation this very process of adjustment,, that is, the origin of towns and their growth in the widest sense. In the end, he, adheres to a demographic concept., 3) Inquiry of Social Change :, , The demographic concept of urbanisation, in short, is not as constricting as it firs, might have appeared; its scope allows inquiry into many facets of social change, and, its root in population preserves a vital interest in the attributes and conditions of, human beings living in organized communities., , Saree of, , , , implications, , WRsweawea, , a, Business Demograph _, y, , Impact, a) Bio, b) Car, c) Ecc, d) Glc, Ans: b, , a4. A sig, destir, a) M, b) M, c) N, ad) N, , Ans: d, , Q5. Cha, a) |, , ), , qd, Ans: d }