Title: Migration
1Migration
Haitian Refugees
Salinas, CA
2Migration
- Long term relocation to a new location outside
the community of origin
Immigration
- Migration inward to a location
Emigration
- Migration outward of a location
3American Migration Facts
- 10,000,000 illegal immigrants in the U.S.
- Largest of commuters in the world Washington,
DC 100 miles per day! - On average, American citizens move once every 6
years.
4Top 10 Countries of Origin for US Legal
Immigrants, 1998
Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue,
Hofstra University
5Illegal Aliens in the United States by Country of
Origin, 1996 (in 1,000s)
Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue,
Hofstra University
6Immigrants into the U.S.
- Many immigrants provide remittance to home
country. (Haiti GDP 15) - Majority of legal migrants for Canada are
recruited from Mexico - Immigration laws are funny and for certain
groups. (Cubans Wet-foot, Dry-foot)
7Types of Migration
- Internal Migration
- Within one country.
- Crossing domestic jurisdictional boundaries.
- Movements between states or provinces.
- Little government control.
- Factors
- Employment-based.
- Retirement-based.
- Education-based.
- Civil conflicts (internally displaced population).
Ex Peruvians moving from rural parts to Lima
(city).
8Types of Migration
- International Migration
- Between countries
- Crossing country borders
- More govt control.
- Factors
- Economic
- Family
- Political conflicts
9Circular Migration
- Takes us on a journey and brings us back-over
short time span. - What you do within these distances is your
activity space - Nomads are considered circular (action is
repeated)
10Periodic Movement
- Involves returning home, HOWEVER, consider it to
be where one spends the majority of their time. - Transhumance-Pastoral farming based upon seasonal
availability of pastures
- Also college or migrant work
11Types of Migration
- Voluntary migration
- The migrant makes the decision to move.
- Most migration is voluntary.
- Military (10 Million Americans)
12Forced Migration -Involuntary migration in which
the mover has no role in the decision-making
process. -Slavery. -About 12-30 million African
slaves were brought to the Americas between 1519
and 1867. -In 1860, there were close to 4 million
slaves in the United States. -In early 20th
century, African Americans moved
North. -Refugees -Military conscription. -Children
of migrants. -Situations of divorce or
separation. -Australian convicts Irish potato
famine is considered both voluntary and forced
13Why do people migrate?
- Push Factors-Reasons to leave
- Pull Factors-Reasons attracting to a place
instead of another place
Major International Migration Patterns, Early
1990s
14Push-Pull Trends
- Men traditionally have more employment choices
and income. - Males tend to migrate farther and are more mobile
than women. - Push ex 50,000 Asians left Uganda when dictator
took power. - Push ex Montserrat volcanoes
15Ravenstein Laws
- Inverse relationship b/w migration and distance
b/w the source destination -
- Says migrants who go longer distances tend to
choose big-city destinations. - Is of migrants decreases as the distance of
travel increases. - -Idea is called the Gravity Model.
16Colonial Migration
- Colonizers and exploration heavily influence
migration patterns
17Britain
- Stimulated migration of S. Asians to Singapore,
Fiji, and Trinidad (islands of development) - Also stimulated Chinese migration to SE Asia (are
now minority) - Migration reached peak in 1835-1935.
18Africa
- Geographic realm most effected by the refugee
problems. - Zanzibar (E. Africa) involved in slave trading to
Islamic regions.
19SW Asia
- Afghanistan Civil war caused Soviet Union to get
involved, caused many refugees. - After Gulf War, Kurds in the North were forced to
leave Iraq (Saddam Hussain) - 2.5 million Afghanis counter migrated to Iran
when Taliban took power in Afghanistan
20Europe
- Collapse of Yugoslavia in 1995 caused large
refugee crisis.
21World Migration Routes Since 1700
European
African (slaves)
Indian
Chinese
Japanese
Majority of population descended from immigrants
Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue,
Hofstra University
22SE Asia
- Largest of migrants from Myanmar/Burma due to
S Asia
- Sri Lanka refugees because of Tamil Tigers.
23S. America
- Columbia in 1997
- Fortified barriers. Examples?
24Selective Migration
- Excluding people with criminal records, health
problems, or political beliefs not in line with
the accepting country. - Many countries practice this
- Is it discrimination?
25- U.S. Immigration Policies
- 1882, Bars Asian immigration for ten years
(extended) - 1921, Quota Act - country by country quotas
(Europe) - 1924 National Origins Act - country by country
quotas - 1965, Immigration Act - quotas for countries
replaced, in 1968, with hemisphere quotas of 170,
000 for East and 120,000 for West - 1978, Immigration Act - global quota of 290, 000
- 1980, Refugee Act - quotas do not apply to those
seeking political asylum - 1986, Immigration Reform and Control Act admitted
large numbers of former illegal. - 1990, Immigration Act raised global quotas to
roughly 675,000 - 1995, visas issued Preferentially
- 480,000 - to relatives of people here
- 140,000 - to those with special skills and
education - 55,000 - to diversity candidates (i.e., mostly
not from Latin Amer. or Asia) - Current Total 675,000
26Key Term Forced Migration
27Forced Migration
The Trail of Tears, 1838
28Slaves Reaching British North America, 1601-1867
(in 1,000s)
Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue,
Hofstra University
29U.S. Immigration
- Prior to 1840, 90 of U.S.immigration was from
Britain - Two Big Waves
- 1840 - 1930 W. and N. European transitioning to
Southern and Eastern European by 1910 - Irish (potato famine in 1840s) and Germans
- During 1900s Italians, Russians, Austria-Hungary
(Czech, Poland, Romania, etc.) - 1950 - Today Asians and Latin Americans
declining Europeans - Asians China, India 1980s -1990s Phillipines,
Vietnam, and South Korea - Latin America Mexico, Dom. Rep., El Salvador,
Cuba, Haiti - 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act admitted
former illegals in 1990, 1991.
Ellis Island National Monument
30U.S. Migration
- Prior to 1840, 90 of U.S.immigration was from
Britain - Three trends
- Destinations of U.S. Immigrants - ethnic
neighborhoods often result of chain migration - Mexicans California, Texas, Illinois, New York
- Caribbean Florida or New York
- Chinese and Indians New York California
- Other Asians California
- Armenians ????
Ellis Island National Monument
31(No Transcript)
32US Population by Race and Ethnicity, 1990-2050
Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue,
Hofstra University
33Population Pyramid of Native and Foreign Born
Population, United States, 2000 (in )
Foreign Born
Native
Male
Female
Female
Male
Age
Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue,
Hofstra University
34Migration by Major Metropolitan Areas in the
United States, 1990-98 (in 1,000s)
Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue,
Hofstra University
35The Ten Fastest-Growing Metropolitan Areas,
19902000Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census
2000 1990 Census. Web www.census.gov
36Interregional Migrations
- U.S. population has been moving Westward and
Southward - Gold Rush (1849) and Donner Party just the most
dramatic examples of hardship. - Wells, Pumps, Aqueducts, Mosquito Control and Air
Conditioning have allowed this move which
otherwise would be impossible. - Loss of Industrial Jobs in east compliments
increase in Sunbelt service sector (biotech,
communications).
37Voluntary African-American Migrations
- Blacks moved to Industrial Belt (i.e., Chicago,
New York, Detroit) and Los Angeles during World
Wars (labor shortages).
38Intraregional Migrations in U.S.
- U.S. population has been moving out of the city
centers to the suburbs suburbanization and
counterurbanization
- Developed Countries suburbanization
- automobiles and roads
- American Dream
- better services
- counterurbanization
- idyllic settings
- cost of land for retirement
- slow pace, yet high tech connections to services
and markets
U.S. intraregional migration during 1990s.
39Intraregional Migrations in LDCs
- Populations in the less developed world are
rushing to cities in search of work and income.
- Urbanization
- migration from rural areas
- lack of jobs in countryside
- lack of services in cities
- Tokyo, Los Angeles, and New York only MDC cities
on top 10 list
Lagos, Nigeria
Mumbai, India
Mexico City, Mexico