Many places around the world have experienced population growth in the past decade and even population decline due to the COVID pandemic. According to worldometer’s current statistics the global population continues to thrive reaching a little over 8 billion and still growing. Although, Kazakhstan only ranks 64 we can see that they have a decent 1.21 percent yearly change with the net change being about 225,000 to the total of 19 million. When we look at their 2021 stats from Our World in Data for birth rates and death rates per 1,000 people, we can see that they are still a growing population as the birth rate (21.54) is double the death rate (10.23). Birthrates measure the number of births in a population by using a percentage or a ratio per 1,000 people and Death rates measure using the same methods (Marston, Knox, Liverman, Del Casino, Robbins, 2019, p. 39). Not only does this contribute to the growing population, but groups of people who weren’t living there whose ethnicity is from Kazakhstan are moving back into their home country. Ethnicity is defined as a “state of belonging to a social group that has a common national or cultural tradition; socially created system of rules about who belongs to a particular group” (Marston, Knox, Liverman, Del Casino, Robbins, 2019, p. 36). Population growth isn’t necessarily a bad thing as long as it is sustainable, but for Kazakhstan population growth can be dangerous as generally they have been struggling with basic economic rights and are being directed to the northern region.
UNICEF's country profile for Kazakhstan , including under-five mortality rates, child health, education and sanitation data.
1941 marked an escalation of the Second World War in Europe. By the middle of the year, Germany and its European allies had already consolidated power across most of the continent, with only the United Kingdom and Soviet Union not under Axis control or on neutral terms with Germany. As population sizes were fundamental to the war effort, both in terms of military manpower and the workforce of the home front, the annexation of other countries proved vital in supplying new volunteers, conscripts, and forced laborers for the Axis war effort. Together, Germany and Austria had a similar population to the rest of Europe's Axis powers combined, with all giving a total population of 154 million. However, the total population of the Axis-occupied territories in Europe was comparable to the Axis home fronts themselves, at almost 130 million people
Germans in the East Eastern Europe had a sizeable population of ethnic Germans who often worked with the Axis powers, and the German Army recruited upwards of a million volunteers from occupied countries. The Soviet Union in particular had a number of Russia German enclaves across the region, that reached as far as the Volga river and Kazakhstan and numbered at several million people. In Russia, these communities had existed for centuries, but they were ostracized or mistrusted by Soviet leadership and the deaths of these communities under Stalin's regime is often considered genocide. In addition to ethnic Germans, collaborators also included large numbers of Eastern Europeans who sympathized with Nazi ideology, or were hostile to Soviet or communist expansion; this also included ethnic minorities, such as Muslims from the Balkans or USSR.
Collaborators in the West The perceived threat of communism in the west saw men volunteer from countries such as France, the Netherlands, or Norway, to fight in the Axis armies. The fluctuating borders of the interwar period also meant that there were many German communities across the borders of neighboring countries, whose men also enlisted in the Wehrmacht. Within these occupied countries, conspirators with local knowledge were used to track down Jews and political adversaries, and many collaborated in order to elevate their positions in the government or enterprises. Apart from Austria, however, the majority of the public in annexed territories were unsupportive or hostile to their occupiers, and after the war, many of the surviving collaborators were tried (and often executed) for their actions.
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Many places around the world have experienced population growth in the past decade and even population decline due to the COVID pandemic. According to worldometer’s current statistics the global population continues to thrive reaching a little over 8 billion and still growing. Although, Kazakhstan only ranks 64 we can see that they have a decent 1.21 percent yearly change with the net change being about 225,000 to the total of 19 million. When we look at their 2021 stats from Our World in Data for birth rates and death rates per 1,000 people, we can see that they are still a growing population as the birth rate (21.54) is double the death rate (10.23). Birthrates measure the number of births in a population by using a percentage or a ratio per 1,000 people and Death rates measure using the same methods (Marston, Knox, Liverman, Del Casino, Robbins, 2019, p. 39). Not only does this contribute to the growing population, but groups of people who weren’t living there whose ethnicity is from Kazakhstan are moving back into their home country. Ethnicity is defined as a “state of belonging to a social group that has a common national or cultural tradition; socially created system of rules about who belongs to a particular group” (Marston, Knox, Liverman, Del Casino, Robbins, 2019, p. 36). Population growth isn’t necessarily a bad thing as long as it is sustainable, but for Kazakhstan population growth can be dangerous as generally they have been struggling with basic economic rights and are being directed to the northern region.