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2
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- Geographers document from where people migrate and to where they
migrate.
- They also study reasons why people migrate.
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3
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- Most people migrate in search of three objectives:
- economic opportunity
- cultural freedom
- environmental comfort.
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- The Key Issues are:
- Why do people migrate?
- Where are migrants distributed?
- Why do migrants face obstacles?
- Why do people migrate within a country?
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- The subject of this chapter is a specific type of relocation diffusion
called migration, which is a permanent move to a new location.
- Emigration is migration from a location
- Immigration is migration to a location.
- The difference between the number of immigrants and the number of
emigrants is the net migration.
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- Migration is a form of mobility, which is a more general term covering
all types of movements from one place to another.
- Short-term, repetitive, or cyclical movements that recur on a regular
basis, such as daily, monthly, or annually, are called circulation.
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- If people can participate in the globalization of culture and economy
regardless of place of residence, why do they still migrate in large
numbers?
- The answer is that place is still important to an individual cultural
identity and economic prospects.
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- Reasons for migrating
- Push and pull factors
- • Economic • Cultural • Environmental
- – Intervening obstacles
- Distance of migration
- Internal migration
- International migration
- Characteristics of migrants
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- Geography has no comprehensive theory of migration, although a
nineteenth-century essay of 11 migration “laws” written by E. G.
Ravenstein is the basis for contemporary migration studies.
- Ravenstein’s “laws” can be organized into three groups:
- reasons
- distance
- migrant characteristics
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10
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- Most people migrate for economic reasons.
- Cultural and environmental factors also induce migration, although not
as frequently as economic factors.
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11
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- People decide to migrate because of push factors and pull factors.
- A push factor induces people to move out of their present location
- A pull factor induces people to move into a new location.
- Both push and pull factors typically play a role in human migration.
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- We can identify 3 major kinds of push and pull factors:
- Economic
- Cultural
- Environmental
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- Most people migrate for economic reasons.
- The relative attractiveness of a region can shift with economic change.
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- Forced international migration has historically occurred for two main
reasons:
- Slavery
- Political instability
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- In the twentieth century, forced international migration increased
because of political instability resulting from cultural diversity.
- Refugees are people who have been forced to migrate from their home
country and cannot return for fear of persecution.
- Political conditions can also operate as pull factors, especially the
lure of freedom.
- With the election of democratic governments in Eastern Europe during
the 1990s, Western Europe’s political pull has disappeared as a
migration factor.
- However, Western Europe pulls an increasing number of migrants from
Eastern Europe for economic reasons.
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- People also migrate for environmental reasons, pulled toward physically
attractive regions and pushed from hazardous ones.
- Attractive environments for migrants include mountains, seasides, and
warm climates.
- Migrants are also pushed from their homes by adverse physical
conditions.
- Water—either too much or too little—poses the most common
environmental threat.
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- Where migrants go is not always their desired destination.
- They may be blocked by an intervening obstacle.
- In the past, intervening obstacles were primarily environmental. . .
like mountains and deserts.
- Bodies of water long have been important intervening obstacles.
- However, today’s migrant faces intervening obstacles created by local
diversity in government and politics.
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- Ravenstein’s theories made two main points about the distance that
migrants travel to their home:
- Most migrants relocate a short distance and remain within the same
country.
- Long-distance migrants to other countries head for major centers of
economic activity.
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- International migration is permanent movement from one country to
another, whereas internal migration is permanent movement within the
same country.
- International migrants are much less numerous than internal migrants.
- Interregional migration is movement from one region of a country to
another, while intraregional migration is movement within one region.
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- International migration is further divided into two types
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- Geographer Wilber Zelinsky has identified a migration transition, which
consists of changes in a society comparable to those in the demographic
transition.
- A society in stage 1,
- Unlikely to migrate permanently.
- Does have high daily or seasonal mobility in search of food.
- According to migration transition theory, societies in stages 3 and 4
are the destinations of the international migrants leaving the stage 2
countries in search of economic opportunities.
- Internal migration within countries in stages 3 and 4 of the
demographic transition is intraregional, from cities to surrounding
suburbs.
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- Ravenstein noted distinctive gender and family-status patterns in his
migration theories:
- Most long- distance migrants have historically been male
- Most long-distance migrants have historically been adult individuals
rather than families with children.
- Changes in Gender of Migrants
- But since the 1990s the gender pattern has reversed, and women now
constitute about 55 percent of U.S. immigration.
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- Ravenstein also believed that most long-distance migrants were young
adults seeking work.
- For the most part, this pattern continues for the United States.
- With the increase in women migrating. . . more children are coming with
their mother.
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- The origin of Mexican immigrants to the United States matches the
expectations of the migration transition and distance-decay theories.
- The destination of choice within the United States is overwhelmingly
states that border Mexico.
- But most immigrants originate not from Mexico’s northern states but
from interior states.
- Because farm work is seasonal. . . the greatest number of Mexicans head
north to the United States in the autumn and return home in the spring.
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- Global migration patterns
- U.S. migration patterns
- Colonial immigration
- 19th century immigration
- Recent immigration
- Impact of immigration on the U.S.
- Legacy of European migration
- Undocumented immigration
- Destination of immigrants within the U.S.
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- From 1607.. . until 1840, a steady stream of Europeans (totaling 2
million) migrated to the American colonies and after 1776. . . the
United States.
- Ninety percent of European immigrants. . . prior to 1840 came from Great
Britain. During the 1840s and 1850s, the level of immigration. . .
surged.
- More than 4 million people migrated,.. . more than twice as many as in
the previous 250 years combined.
- More than 90 percent of all U.S. immigrants during the 1840s and 1850s
came from Northern and Western Europe, including two fifths from Ireland
and another one third from Germany.
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- U.S. immigration declined somewhat during the 1860s as a result of the
Civil War (1861—1865).
- A second peak was reached during the 1880s, where more than a half-
million people, more than three-fourths during the late 1880s, came
from Northern and Western Europe.
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- Economic problems in the United States discouraged immigration during
the early 1890s, but by the end of the decade the level reached a third
peak.
- During this time, most people came from Italy, Russia, and
Austria-Hungary, places that previously had sent few people.
- The record year was 1907, with 1.3 million.
- The shift coincided with the diffusion of the Industrial Revolution.. .
to Southern and Eastern Europe.
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- Immigration to the United States dropped sharply in the 1930s and 1940s,
during the Great Depression and World War II, then it steadily increased
during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s.
- It surged during the 1980s and 1990s to historically high levels.
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- The U.S. population has been built up through a combination of
emigration from Africa and England primarily during the eighteenth
century, from Europe primarily during the nineteenth century, and from
Latin America and Asia primarily during the twentieth century.
- In the twenty-first century, the impact of immigration varies around the
country.
- Massive European migration ended with the start of World War I.
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- Rapid population growth in Europe fueled emigration, especially after
1800.
- Application of new technologies.. . pushed much of Europe into stage 2
of the demographic transition.
- To promote more efficient agriculture, some European governments forced
the consolidation of several small farms into larger units.
- Displaced farmers could choose between working in factories in the
large cities or migrating to the United States or another country where
farmland was plentiful.
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- Europeans frequently imposed political domination on existing
populations and injected their cultural values with little regard for
local traditions.
- Economies in Africa and Asia became based on extracting resources for
export to Europe, rather than on using those resources to build local
industry.
- Many of today’s conflicts in former European colonies result from past
practices by European immigrants.
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- Many people who cannot legally enter the United States are now
immigrating illegally, . . . called undocumented immigrants.
- The U.S. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services (BCIS) estimate
7 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S., although other estimates
are as high as 20 million.
- The BCIS apprehends more than a million persons annually trying to
cross the southern U.S. border.
- Half of the undocumented residents legally enter the country as
students or tourists and then remain after they are supposed to leave.
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- The 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act tried to reduce the flow of
illegal immigrants.
- Aliens who could prove that they had lived in the United States
continuously between 1982 and 1987 could become permanent resident
aliens and apply for U.S. citizenship after 5 years.
- At the same time, the law discouraged further illegal immigration by
making it harder for recent immigrants to get jobs without proper
documentation.
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- Immigration policies of host countries
- U.S. quota laws
- Temporary migration for work
- Time-contract workers
- Economic migrants or refugees?
- Cultural problems living in other countries
- U.S. attitudes to immigrants
- Attitudes to guest workers
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- The era of unrestricted immigration to the United States, ended when
Congress passed the Quota Act in 1921 and the National Origins Act in
1924.
- Quota laws were designed to assure that most immigrants to the United
States continued to be Europeans.
- Quotas for individual countries were eliminated in 1968 and replaced
with hemispheric quotas.
- In 1978 the hemisphere quotas were replaced by a global quota of
290,000, including a maximum of 20,000 per country.
- The current law has a global quota of 620,000, with no more than 7
percent from one country, but numerous qualifications and exceptions
can alter the limit considerably.
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- Other countries charge that by giving preference to skilled workers,
U.S. immigration policy now contributes to a brain drain, which is a
large-scale emigration by talented people.
- The average immigrant has received more education than the typical
American: nearly one-fourth of all legal immigrants to the United States
have attended graduate school, compared to less than one-tenth of
native-born Americans.
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- Millions of Asians migrated in the nineteenth century as time-contract
laborers, recruited for a fixed period to work in mines or on
plantations.
- More than 29 million ethnic Chinese currently live permanently in other
countries, for the most part in Asia.
- In recent years people have immigrated illegally in Asia to find work in
other countries.
- Estimates of illegal foreign workers in Taiwan range from 20,000 to
70,000.
- Most are Filipinos, Thais, and Malaysians.
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- It is sometimes difficult to distinguish between migrants seeking
economic opportunities and refugees fleeing from the persecution of an
undemocratic government.
- The distinction between economic migrants and refugees is important,
because the United States, Canada, and Western European countries treat
the two groups differently.
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- Since the 1959 revolution that brought the Communist government of Fidel
Castro to power, the U.S. government has regarded emigrants from Cuba as
political refugees.
- In the years immediately following the revolution, more than 600,000
Cubans were admitted to the United States.
- A second flood of Cuban emigrants reached the United States in 1980,
when Fidel Castro suddenly decided to permit political prisoners,
criminals, and mental patients to leave the country.
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- Shortly after the 1980 Mariel boatlift from Cuba, several thousand
Haitians also sailed in small vessels for the United States.
- Claiming that they had migrated for economic advancement,. . . U.S.
immigration officials would not let the Haitian boat people stay.
- The Haitians brought a lawsuit.
- The government settled the case by agreeing to admit the Haitians.
- After a 1991 coup that replaced Haiti’s elected president, Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, thousands of Haitians fled their country.. . but the U.S.
State Department decided that most left Haiti for economic rather than
political reasons.
- The United States invaded Haiti in 1994 to reinstate Aristide as
president.
- Many Haitians still try to migrate to the United States.
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- For many immigrants, admission to another country does not end their
problems.
- Politicians exploit immigrants as scapegoats for local economic
problems.
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- Americans have always regarded new arrivals with suspicion but tempered
their dislike during the nineteenth century because immigrants helped to
settle the frontier and extend U.S. control across the continent.
- Opposition to immigration intensified when the majority of immigrants
ceased to come from Northern and Western Europe.
- More recently, hostile citizens in California and other states have
voted to deny undocumented immigrants access to most public services,
such as schools, day-care centers, and health clinics.
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- In Europe, many guest workers suffer from poor social conditions.
- Both guest workers and their host countries regard the arrangement as
temporary.
- In reality, however, many guest workers remain indefinitely, especially
if they are joined by other family members.
- As a result of lower economic growth rates, Middle Eastern and Western
European countries have reduced the number of guest workers in recent
years.
- Political parties that support restrictions on immigration have gained
support in France, Germany, and other European countries, and attacks
by local citizens on immigrants have increased.
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- Migration between regions of a country
- Migration between regions within the U.S.
- Migration between regions in other countries
- Migration within one region
- Rural-urban migration
- Urban-suburban migration
- Migration from metropolitan to non-metropolitan regions
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- In the United States, interregional migration was more prevalent in the
past, when most people were farmers.
- The most famous example of large-scale internal migration is the opening
of the American West.
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- Soviet policy encouraged factory construction near raw materials rather
than near existing population concentrations (see Chapter 11).
- The collapse of the Soviet Union ended policies that encouraged
interregional migration.
- In the transition to a market-based economy, Russian government
officials no longer dictate “optimal” locations for factories.
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- Most Brazilians live in a string of large cities near the Atlantic
Coast.
- To increase the attractiveness of the interior, the government moved its
capital in 1960 from Rio to a newly built city called Brasilia.
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- Since 1969 the Indonesian government has paid for the migration of more
than 5 million people, primarily from the island of Java, where nearly
two-thirds of its people live, to less populated islands.
- The number of participants has declined in recent years, primarily
because of environmental concerns.
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- Throughout Western Europe. . . the regions with net immigration are also
the ones with the highest per capita incomes.
- Even countries that occupy relatively small land areas have important
interregional migration trends.
- Regional differences in economic conditions within European countries
may become greater with increased integration of the continent’s
economy.
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- Indians require a permit to migrate—or even to visit—the State of Assam.
- The restrictions, which date from the British colonial era, are designed
to protect the ethnic identity of Assamese.
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- During the late twentieth century, the more developed countries of North
America and Western Europe witnessed a new trend.
- More people in these regions immigrated into rural areas than emigrated
out of them.
- Net migration from urban to rural areas is called counter-urbanization.
- Most counter-urbanization represents genuine migration from cities and
suburbs to small towns and rural communities.
- Like suburbanization, people move from urban to rural areas for
lifestyle reasons.
- Many migrants from urban to rural areas are retired people.
- Counter-urbanization has stopped in the United States because of poor
economic conditions in some rural areas.
- Future migration trends are unpredictable in more developed countries,
because future economic conditions are difficult to forecast.
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