Environment, health, and long-term food security
Publications
- United Nations Population Fund. 2004. The State of World Population 2004: The Cairo Consensus at Ten: Population, Reproductive Health and the Global Effort to End Poverty. New York: UNFPA. (section on men) View online
- Greene, Margaret E. 2008. “Poor Health, Poor Women: How Reproductive Health Affects Poverty.” Environmental Change and Security Project Focus: Issue 16, June. View the pdf
- Greene, Margaret E. 1985. Book review. Rural Development in China, by Dwight Perkins and Shahid Yusuf, in Population Today, February.
- Rao, Vijayendra, and Margaret E. Greene. 1996. “Marital Instability, Inter-Spousal Bargaining, and Their Implications for Fertility in Brazil.” Williams College Research Memorandum Series, RM 153, February. Revised University of Chicago PRC Working Paper series OSC (PRC) 91-3.
- Translation of five papers in Bledsoe, Caroline and Gilles Pison, editors. 1994. Nuptiality in Sub-Saharan Africa: Contemporary Anthropological and Demographic Perspectives. New York: Oxford University Press. (French into English).
- Greene, Margaret E. 1991. The Importance of Being Married: Marriage Choice and its Consequences in Brazil. Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.
- Translation of Tunisia: High Fertility Stalls Development, for Draper Fund Report (Population Crisis Committee) No. 14, September 1985 (French into English).
- Greenberg, Brian and Margaret E. Greene. 2004. “Demography’s Ecological Frontier: Rethinking the ‘Nature’ of the Household and Community.” In Categories and Contexts: Anthropological and Historical Studies in Critical Demography, Simon Szreter, editor. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Greene, Margaret E. 1995. Book review. Women, Feminism, and Development/Femmes, Féminisme, et Développement, Dagenais and Piché, eds. Population and Development Review. December.
- Greene, Margaret E. 1995. Book review. Women’s Rights, Human Rights: International Feminist Perspectives. Peters and Wolper, Eds. Population and Development Review. September.
- Greene, Margaret E. 1995. Book review. Child Care and Culture: Lessons from Africa, by LeVine et al. Population and Development Review. June.
- Greene, Margaret E. 1995. Book review. Contraception and Abortion in 19th-Century America, by Janet Farrell Brodie. Annals of The American Academy, 539: May.
- Greene, Margaret E. 1995. Book review. Gender, Women, and Health in the Americas, edited by Elza Gómez Gómez. Population and Development Review 21(1): March.
- Greene, Margaret E. and William Crocker. 1994. “The Demography of Brazil’s Canela Tribe,” in The Demography of Small-Scale Societies: Case Studies from Lowland South America. Kathleen Adams and David Price, eds. South American Indian Studies, Number 4. Bennington, VT: Bennington College.
- Greene, Margaret E., and Vijayendra Rao. 1994. “A Compressão do Mercado Matrimonial e o Aumento das Uniões Consensuais no Brasil.” Revista Brasileira de Estudos de População, Campinas 9(2) 1992.
- Jacobs, Jerry A., and Margaret E. Greene. 1994. “Race and Ethnicity, Social Class and Schooling in 1910.” In Watkins, Susan, Ed., After Ellis Island: The Immigrant Experience in America. New York: The Russell Sage Foundation.
- Greene, Margaret E. 1993. Book review. Istanbul Households: Marriage, Family and Fertility, 1880-1940, by Alan Duben and Cem Behar. The Annals 526: March.
- Greene, Margaret E. 1987. “Intercensal Change and the Indirect Estimation of Mortality: The Case of Pakistan,” in Pakistan Development Review, Vol. XXVI, Winter: 569-582.
Presentations
- “Beyond the Malthusian Legacy: A Demographic Approach to Social Ecology,” with Brian Greenberg, paper presented at International Union for the Scientific Study of Population Congress, August 2001, Salvador da Bahia, Brazil.
- “Demography’s Ecological Frontier: Rethinking the ‘Nature’ of the Household and Community,” with Brian Greenberg. International Union for the Scientific Study of Population meeting on Social Categories in Population Studies. Cairo, Egypt, September 1999.
- “A Moral Ecology of Sex Ratios: The Linked Fate of Females in Household and Livestock Economies,” with Brian Greenberg. Population Association of America, Chicago, April 1998.