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Africa’s Population Explosion: Scale, Not Poverty — and the Demographic Shock That Will Reshape the World
Coles
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Africa’s Population Explosion: Scale, Not Poverty — and the Demographic Shock That Will Reshape the World in Grande Prairie, AB
Current price: $6.87

Coles
Africa’s Population Explosion: Scale, Not Poverty — and the Demographic Shock That Will Reshape the World in Grande Prairie, AB
Current price: $6.87
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
Africa is entering the largest demographic expansion in human history. This is not a story about poverty or aid. It is a story about scale and the global consequences of population growth on a level the world has never managed before.
In Africa’s Population Explosion , Oswin Keller presents a clear, unsentimental analysis of the forces that will define the 21st century. As Europe, East Asia, and parts of the Americas age and contract, Africa is becoming the center of global population growth. Within decades, most new workers on Earth will be African. This shift will reshape labor markets, migration patterns, political stability, and the balance of global power. The question is not whether this transformation will happen, but whether Africa can absorb its own growth fast enough to prevent systemic pressure from spilling outward.
Drawing on demography, economics, and geopolitical analysis, this book explains why fertility remains high, why cities are expanding faster than jobs, and why infrastructure struggles to keep pace with exponential growth. It outlines two possible futures: one where education, industrialization, and governance stabilize the continent, and another where youth bulges, unemployment, and institutional weakness trigger large-scale instability and migration.
This is not a moral argument. It is a structural one.
If Africa stabilizes, it becomes the largest growth engine in the world economy. If it does not, migration pressure, labor imbalances, and security risks will reach global scale. Current development models are not designed for this level of demographic change, and no global system is prepared to manage it.
Sharp, analytical, and grounded in long-range thinking, Africa’s Population Explosion reframes one of the most misunderstood forces shaping the future. Africa is not a side story in global affairs. It is the pivot on which the century will turn.
Africa is entering the largest demographic expansion in human history. This is not a story about poverty or aid. It is a story about scale and the global consequences of population growth on a level the world has never managed before.
In Africa’s Population Explosion , Oswin Keller presents a clear, unsentimental analysis of the forces that will define the 21st century. As Europe, East Asia, and parts of the Americas age and contract, Africa is becoming the center of global population growth. Within decades, most new workers on Earth will be African. This shift will reshape labor markets, migration patterns, political stability, and the balance of global power. The question is not whether this transformation will happen, but whether Africa can absorb its own growth fast enough to prevent systemic pressure from spilling outward.
Drawing on demography, economics, and geopolitical analysis, this book explains why fertility remains high, why cities are expanding faster than jobs, and why infrastructure struggles to keep pace with exponential growth. It outlines two possible futures: one where education, industrialization, and governance stabilize the continent, and another where youth bulges, unemployment, and institutional weakness trigger large-scale instability and migration.
This is not a moral argument. It is a structural one.
If Africa stabilizes, it becomes the largest growth engine in the world economy. If it does not, migration pressure, labor imbalances, and security risks will reach global scale. Current development models are not designed for this level of demographic change, and no global system is prepared to manage it.
Sharp, analytical, and grounded in long-range thinking, Africa’s Population Explosion reframes one of the most misunderstood forces shaping the future. Africa is not a side story in global affairs. It is the pivot on which the century will turn.




















