Chapter 3 Migration

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Migration transition

Change in the migration pattern in a society that results from industrialization, population growth, and other social and economic changes that also produce the demographic transition.

Distance decay function

The effects of distance on interaction, generally the greater the distance the less interaction.

Guest worker

legal immigrant who has a work visa, usually short term.

"Gateway" cities

Cities that, because of their geographic location, act as ports of entry and distribution centers for large geographic areas

Internal migration/international migration

Internal migration: Human movement within a nation-state, such as ongoingly westward and southward movements in the United States. International migration: Human movement involving movement across international boundaries.

Remittances

Money migrants send back to family and friends in their home coutnries, often in cash, forming an important part of the economy in many poorer coutnries.

Counter-urbanization

Net migration for urban to rural areas in more developed countries.

Chain migration/migration ladder

Pattern of migration that develops when migrants move along and through kinship links (i.e. one migrant settles in one place then writes, calls, or communicates through others to describe this place to family and friends who in turn will migrate there.).

Refugee(s)

People who have fled their country because of political persecution and seek asylum in another country.

Push v Pull factors

Push factors: Negative conditions and preceptions that induce people to leave their abode and migrate to a new locale. Pull factors: Positive conditions and preceptions that effectively attract people to new locales from other areas.

Brain drain

The loss of well-educated people such as doctors or engineers to another country.

Urbanization/Suburbanization

Urbanization: A term with several connatations. The proportion of a country's population living in urban places is its level of urbanization. The process or urbanization involves the movement of people to, and the clustering of people in, towns and cities-a major force in every geographic realm today. Another kind of urbanization occurs when an expanding city absorbs the rural countryside and transforms it into suburbs; in the case or cities in the developing world, this also generates peripheral shantytowns. Suburbanization: Movement or upper- and middle-class from urban core areas to the surrounding outskirts to escape pollution as well as deteriorating social conditions (percieved and actual). In North America, the process began in the earth 19th century and became a mass phenomenon by the second helf of the 20th century.

Migration selectivity

Combination of factors that predict a person's likelyhood to migration based on factors like age, gender, and education.

Emigration/immigration

Emigration: Moving AWAY from home country. Immigration: Moving INTO a new home country

Forced vs Voluntary migration

Forced migration: Human migration flows in which the movers have no choice but to relocate. Voluntary migration: People relocate in response to precieved opportunity, not because they are forced to move.

Discuss the contributions of Revenstein the the study of human movement and migration.

Ravenstein's Laws of Migration: -Most migrants move only a short distance. -There is a process of absorption, whereby people immediately surrounding a rapidly growing town move into it and the gaps they leave are filled by migrants from more distant areas, and so on until the attractive force [pull factors] is spent. -There is a process of dispersion, which is the inverse of absorption. -Each migration flow produces a compensating counter-flow. -Long-distance migrants go to one of the great centers of commerce and industry. Natives of towns are less migratory than those from rural areas. -Females are more migratory than males. -Economic factors are the main cause of migration. Ravenstein was a british demographer who tried to aswer the question or why people voluntarily migrate. He studied forms of internal migration in England and produced the laws listed above which are still commonly found today.

Space-time prism

The set of all points that can be reached by an individual given a maximum possible speed from a starting point in space-time and an ending point in space-time.

Activity Space

The space within which daily activity occurs.

Circulation

The spread or transmission of something (as news or money) to a wider group or area.

Transhumance/Nomadism

Transhumance: A seasonal periodic movement of pastoralists and their livestock between highland and lowland pastures. Nomadism: Movement among a definite set of places-often cyclic movement.

Mobility

All types of movement from one location to another.

Net migration

The difference in the number of migrants going into a country (immagration) and the number of migrants leaving (emigration).

Intervening obstacle

An environmental or cultural feature of the landscape that hinders migration.

Characterize a refugee and a "refugee population".

A refugee is someone who has migrated away from their home in order to escape some power that threatens them. The british definition of a refugee is: "A person who has a wellfounded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, member-ship or a particular social goup, or political opinion." Some countries find this incorrect mainly because of the word "wellfounded" which could be judged in many different ways. For example, according the the british definition, victims of hurricane Katrina do not count as refugees. People like these are called Internally displaced persons or IDPs. These people have been forced to leave their homes but not cross any international borders. A refugee population is when a large group of refugees, fleeing from the same cause, form a community together. Normally these comunities are very small and very poor.

Describe specific examples of historic and contemporary forced migrations, explaining push and pull factors associated with each.

1. The Atlantic Slave trade: Between the years of 1701 and 1810, The "new world" or the western continents were becoming inhabited by Europeans. These Europeans were making plantations or large farms that required lots of time and man power to generate enough money to keep the plantation working. The owners decided to find slaves who would work on the plantation for little to no cost. The owners would buy slaves from Europeans shippers, who in turn would pay African raiders for slaves. Over 12 million slaves were estimated to have crossed the Atlantic to the Caribbean, Brazil, or southern United States. This is a form of forced Migration because the slaves had no choice but to go with the African raiders. Most slaves had no idea why they had to leave so they had no reason to make push or pull factors. 2. WW2: When Hitler came to power in 1933, he began what many would call the Holocaust. In which the Nazi party began creating concentration camps to hold jewish and enemy prisoners. Hitler began to force every jewish family in Europe to migrate to these concentration camps to be either tortured or even murdered. The Jewish families were told if they did not cooperate they would be killed. many families tried to hide so many might suggest that this migration was voluntary, but if the family was caught trying to escape they would either be sent to camp or killed on the spot. Many families believed it would be a safer choice to just go with the Nazis than risk losing thier entire family. Also if you did escape, you would be lost somewhere in Europe with nowhere to go and no idea if the Nazis would find you or not.

Migration stream

A constant flow of migrants from the same origin to the same destination.

Gravity model

A mathematical prediction of the interaction of places, the interaction being a function of population size of the respective places and the distance between them.

Distinguish between and give characteristics of the following types of human movement: circulation and migration, forced and voluntary migration, immigrants and emigrants, push and pull factors.

Circulation vs. Migration: Circulation are short term repeated movements of people whereas migration is a permanent relocation of someone's home. Circulation is like going to work each day and coming back home that night for dinner. Migration would be like moving to a new home in a different country and never going back. Forced vs voluntary migration: Forced is caused be an external authority pushing someone out of an area or their home whereas Volunatry is when the migrant has a choice to stay where they are or to try and find a new home. An example of Forced migration could be the Atlantic Slave trade which forced over twelve million African Americans to leave their homes and move to the western hemisphere to be sold as slaves. An example of voluntary would be Europeans moving to America. They didn't have to move but they did because of the rumors or a better life. Immigrants vs Emigrants: Immigrants are people who are entering a region whereas Emigrants are people leaving a region. An example if an immigrant could be a citizen of Mexico crossing the border into America in hopes of living there. An example of an emigrant could be Citizens of Sudan fleeing to Chad because of genocide in Sudan. Push/Pull factors: Push factors are the reasons people would want to migrate to a region. Pull factors are the reason why people would want to migrant to a region. An example of a Push factor could be: genocide, An unfair dictatorship, or common environmental problems. An example of a pull factor could be: promise of well paying jobs, Easy to get to, preferable weather conditions, or the migrants have family or friends there.

Explain how distance decay, intervening obstacles, migration selectivity factors affect migration and circulation patterns.

Distance decay can effect migration mainly through the push pull factors. Distance decay is the idea that the further away an idea gets from its source, the less is known about it. A migrant from south Africa would have a very hard time knowing what opportunities are in Russia because of the large distance between them. Also the many Intervening obstacles between the source and the destination would slow down push/ pull factors even more. If a migrant in India hears about great opportunities of living in China and attempts to migrate there, and intervening obstacle could be the himilayas, which would be life threatening to cross. The himilayas are an example of an intervening obstacle, but that is an enviromental obstacle. You could have an economic obstacle such as a town allong the way may be in harsh poverty and you may not be able to continue migrating. Or a political obstacle: Migrating through a country that is ruled under a law that despises something about you like race, gender, culture, or personal status.

Discuss the migration history of the United States through the following: immigration history, immigration policy, historic and contemporary streams or migration, internal migration patterns.

During the course of United States history there have been two migration "waves". One in the early 1900's around the time of world war 1 and the second from 1940ish to september 11, 2001. The first wave was created because the United States allowed anyone to migrate to the United States mainly because it was in the middle of its industrial stage and needed people to take jobs for businesses to thrive. But when World War 1 started many southern and Western Europeans began migrating to the United States causing the first "spike" in immigrants. Congress decided to stop the increased migration from Europe by passing a law that only allowed the amount 3% of 1910's migrants from Europe to be allowed to migrate into the country, but Congress didn't think it was enough so they changed the law to only 2% of 1890 thus ending the first wave migration. The second migration began close after the end of the first wave. Immigrants from countries in the caribbean and central America began to cross the borders into America illegally. After hurricane Katrina and poverty in Haiti many more immigrants illegally tried to smuggle themselves into the country. The immigration count rose steadily until September 11, 2001. When Congress began taking extreme measures to slow illegal migration into the U.S. They had fences built across the borders of Mexico and parts of Canada. As well as increased coast guard protection along states on the Gulf of Mexico where many immigrants were entering by boat.

Correlate migration patterns to the demographic model.

The demographic model shows the average population growth in an area that is becoming industrialized. If migration was to enter into a country during the course of the model, populations may change up the data and come to a differrent conclusion. People migrate to a place where they expect to have better life; If an area begins to push into the second or third stage of the model (when the country begins to industrialize) People will begin to think that they can have a better life in that country. So they migrate to the country and cause the total population of the growing country to skyrocket because of the increase in immagrants and lowered death rates.

Use the gravity model to predict migration and evaluate its efficiency and usefulness.

The gravity model shows how distance effects the number or migrators to a destination. For example, You wouldn't find many people from South Africa in Russia because of the great distance between them. Although the model does not account for advancement in technology. More specifically in the area of transportation. Because of the Internet and airplanes, Chinese immigrants are found quite numerous in the United States, even though they are on the opposite sides of the world.


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