Unit 4 Mini Case Studies Flashcards
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Turkey general statistics
Nearly 28% of the population was born in a different province to the one they now reside in. This is 62% for the area around Istanbul which has attracted migrants for years. Over half the migrants are 15-29 years old and and have a better than average level of education. While rural urban migration was important in the mid 20th century, towards the end of it there was more urban urban migration and less urban rural migration
Push factors in Turkey
Low rural incomes
Lack of job opportunities
Inadequate infrastructure in rural areas
Poor facilities in villages
Lack of services in villages/rural areas
These all encourage out-migration but there are issues of:
Improving education especially for girls
Improving transportation and communication
Skill and information levels of would-be migrants
Presence of earlier migrants in destination areas
Information, willingness to take risks and social networks are important push factors which could also be described as pull factors
Pull factors in Turkey
Job seeking, 20% for men and 10% for women
Education beyond secondary level
Issues related to a household member, over 50% of female migrants moved for marriage or following a husband/partner
Level of socio economic development of a province
Being located in a coastal area
Development in terms of industry and tourism
Having developed provinces as neighbours
Primitive migration examples
Availability and fertility of soils being the main determinant of migration patterns in Sahel
Impelled migration examples
The evacuation prior to a volcanic eruption in Mt Pinatube, Philippines, wholesale movement of people in Monseratt. Since the Boxing Day Tsunami in 2004 countrys are more prepared. The movement pf people with the partition of India (1946) is one of the largest migration under duress in modern times but movement in Middle East as a result of upheavals there rivals it
Forced migration examples
Following the partition of India minority groups of Hindus remained in the new mostly Muslim Pakistan and groups of Muslims stayed in the new Hindu India. Slaves from West Africa to the Caribbean and Southern USA, Asian Indians form Idi Aumins Uganda (1970’s), movement of ethnic groups during the Balkan conflicts (1980-1990) and conflict between Burundi and Rwanda (1993-200%) which caused the displacement of thousands. Volcanic eruption, flood and drought, environmental tragedies like the Chernobyl disaster (1986) are also factors
Free and mass migration examples
In size the largest movement of people was that of Europeans to North America from mid 17th century awards
Period of migration law attitudes examples
Before 1914, the USA allowed entry of anyone who was not a prostitute, convict, lunatic and after 1882, Chinese
The Caribbean was a major source of labour for the UK. West Germany attracted guest workers especially from Turkey
Population registers examples
Japans and some European countries collect continuous data. It was only under the circumstances of WWII and its immediate aftermath that a national register operated in the UK
Socail surveys examples
The UK has the International Passenger Survey which is carried out at seaports and airports
Migration in Pakistan
Significantly more male smigrating than females. Could be due to income gap so can earn more money abroad. Most migrants travel from 20-50 km. Costs may be too high to go further. Small number of single people anyway due to arranged marriages but fewer single than married migrate. Women are less likely to migrate. May have more family ties. Traditional to stay at home. Uneducated.
Rural to rural migration in Brazil
Moving agricultural workers to the Amazon Basin in Brazil after deforestation
Fiji internal migration overview
Walsh in his study of the urbanisation of Fiji examined why islanders migrated to Suva the capital and other coastal towns. 52% of the population of the islands is urban based and Walsh suggested the reasons for this from a mostly rural sugar growing economy to one that includes garment making, processing of sugar, coconuts and ginger and a growing tourist industry
Reasons for internal Fiji migration
Indians originally brought in as plantation workers are not allowed to own land so drift to towns
After independence many locals went in search of administrative jobs
Incomes in rural areas are 25% of those in Suva
Urban incomes have been growing 6x faster than rural ones
Many escape the traditional social structure based on communalism to accumulate individual wealth
Consequences of Fiji migration
Severe rural depletion has threatened livelihoods of those who remain
Rural families become dependent on remittances from urban family members
Disruption of family life: children left behind in the care of elderly relatives
Pressure on services
Housing shortages in towns to which migrants have moved with lots of people ending up as squatters
Large number of migrants who despite their level of education lack the skills to do the jobs that become available so work in the informal economy
Mumbai micro migration
A sample survey of rural migrants from Mumbai found over 75% already had 1 or more relatives living in the city from whom 90% had received assistance on arrival
Peru micro migration
A survey of migration from the Peruvian Highlands to Lima found that 90% of migrants could rely on short term accommodation on arrival and for 50%, contacts had arranged a job for them
How development in origin affects migration examples
In China the development of rural enterprises increases out-migration. In the Punjab the Green Revolution saw high out-migration by the resident population and in-migration from poorer Indian states
Ethnic tension example
In the Niger Delta many locals feel that most jobs go to members of majority ethnic groups (Igbo, Yoruba, Hausa and Fulani who come from elsewhere in Nigeria). The local ethnic groups with smaller numbers nationally feel they have been overlooked by the government resulting in resentment and is a cause of the development of armed groups that have become a major threat to the large oil industry in the region
Tibets changing ethnic balance
Tibet is where the in-migration of lots of Han Chinese has had a big impact. Before the Chinese occupation of Tibet in 1950, few Chinese lived in the Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR). This has changed completely with Chinese migrants how in most of Tibet. In Lhasa the capital there are 200000 Chinese and 100000 Tibetans. If the influx continues, Tibetans could become the minority population in a few decades. Most see this as a threat to their culture and identity. The Dalai Lama, Tibet’s spiritual leader stated that the policy of ‘demographic aggression’ led to ‘cultural genocide’
The 2 groups of migration into Tibet
Government officials and technical experts who can be involuntary migrants
Economic migrants: miners, construction workers, retail and other service workers
Incentives to migrate to Tibet
Incentives from the government for Han Chinese to go to Tibet include tax incentives, allowances, higher wages and better housing
In 2006 the world’s highest railway Qinghai-Tibet was opened. It runs from Golmud to Lhasa. China says the 1140 km line will bring economic opportunities to Tibet. Many Tibetans fear it will encourage even more in-migration
Impact of rural-urban migration impacts population structure examples
20-35 year old women in Grand County USA are 4.3% of the population. This is mainly rural. The ageing population lowers the birth rate and increases the death rate. Out-migration has caused depopulation. In Orange County Florida 12% of the population are women 20-35 year old. Mainly urban
Brazil counter urbanisation
Has significant movement in the last 50 years from urban areas in the relatively poor NE (Fortaleza, Natal, Recife and Salvador) to more prosperous cities of the SE (São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte)