Below you can download publications from PSN.
PSN presentations, consultation responses and correspondence are available via the links to the left.
Date: 01/05/2013
Author(s) Sarah Fisher & Karen Newman, PSN
A PSN briefing note outlining the linkages between population dynamics, sexual and reproductive health and rights and a range of development priorities and sharing key recommendations for the post-2015 development agenda.
Date: 25/09/2012
Author(s) Sarah Fisher, PSN.
A fact sheet presenting key statistics demonstrating the wide-ranging benefits and cost-effective effects of investment in voluntary family planning programmes that respect and protect human rights.
Date: 12/06/2012
Author(s) Sarah Fisher, PSN
A briefing exploring the ways that population dynamics influence biodiversity loss.
Date: 01/06/2012
Author(s) Population and Climate Change Alliance
A leaflet from the Population and Climate Change Alliance, sharing insights from Agenda 21 and beyond about the significance of population dynamics and sexual and reproductive health and rights for sustainable development and presenting our calls for the 2012 Rio+20 UN Conference on Sustainable Development.
Date: 10/04/2012
Author(s) PSN
A briefing exploring the links between population dynamics and fragile states.
Date: 23/03/2012
Author(s) Population and Climate Change Alliance / Sarah Fisher, PSN
An article in the stakeholder magazine Outreach (page 4-5), published at the Rio+20 informal-informal meeting in March 2012.
Date: 20/02/2012
Author(s) Karen Newman, PSN
A fact sheet setting out the reasons why family planning is good for the environment, as well as for saving lives.
Date: 16/12/2011
Author(s) Sarah Fisher, PSN.
An article in the stakeholder magazine Outreach (page 8-9), published at the Rio+20 Intersessional Meeting, sharing key points and recommendations of the Population and Climate Change Alliance's submission to the Rio+20 zero draft.
Date: 05/12/2011
Author(s) Sarah Fisher & Karen Newman, PSN.
An article published in the AIT publication Freedom from Want, examining what difference a focus on population could have made to the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and arguing the important role that a focus on reproductive health and rights must play in the post-2015 development framework.
Date: 07/11/2011
Author(s) Karen Newman, PSN
Summary Report of the March 2010 International Policy Symposium and Ministerial Dialogue on the Connection between Population Dynamics, Reproductive Health and Rights and Climate Change.
Date: 07/11/2011
Author(s) Karen Newman, PSN
Report and Advocacy Toolkit of the March 2010 International Policy Symposium and Ministerial Dialogue on the Connection between Population Dynamics, Reproductive Health and Rights and Climate Change.
Date: 01/11/2011
Author(s) Karen Newman, PSN
A fact sheet on the links between population dynamics and climate change.
Date: 27/10/2011
Author(s) Sarah Fisher & Karen Newman, PSN.
An article published as part of the RH Reality Check website 7 Billion People series, examining the critical links between population, sexual and reproductive health and rights and climate change, arguing that a focus on these links offers opportunities to advance both reproductive justice and climate justice.
Date: 15/11/2010
Author(s) Karen Newman & Sarah Fisher, PSN
A briefing exploring the links between population dynamics and climate change.
Date: 15/11/2010
Author(s) Jane Remme & Sarah Fisher, PSN
A briefing exploring the relationship between population dynamics and poverty reduction.
Date: 11/06/2010
Author(s) Judith Stephenson(UCL); Karen Newman (PSN); Susannah Mayhew (LSHTM)
A paper published in the Journal of Public Health, exploring the linkages between population dynamics (including population growth, migration, urbanization, ageing and household composition) and climate change.
Date: 01/12/2009
Author(s) Susannah Mayhew (LSHTM), Karen Newman (PSN) & Judith Stephenson (UCL).
A scoping paper on the links between population and climate change, commissioned by the UK Department for International Development (DFID).
Date: 18/09/2009
Author(s) Leo Bryant (MSI), Louise Carver (PSN), Colin D Butler (ACT), Ababu Anaged (PHE Ethiopia)
An article published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organisation, analysing the extent to which the least developed countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change are identifying population dynamics as factors interacting with climate the effects of climate change.