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Page 1: migration: the permanent long-term relocation from one place to another.
Page 2: migration: the permanent long-term relocation from one place to another.

migration: the permanent long-term relocation from one place to another

Page 3: migration: the permanent long-term relocation from one place to another.

voluntary migration: people have a choice to move or stay

reluctant migration: less than fully voluntary, but not forced

Such as…- any economic migrant- 75 million people from Europe to Americas (1835-1935)- Indonesia: resettlement from overcrowded Java

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Mexico has been the largest source of migrants to the U.S., but migrants have also come from numerous other Latin American nations

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Migration in 2001. The largest numbers of migrants from Asia come from India, China, the Philippines, and Vietnam

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forced migration: imposed relocation by one group over another causing “refugees”

Ex.: - African slavery- Australian convicts- Siberian labor camps- Trail of Tears- the Holocaust- Rwanda (1994)- Darfur, Sudan (present)

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internal migration: relocation within a country’s borders

- Colombia (rural-urban)- Russia- China (to industrial cities)- U.S. (1800s: “Westward Ho”; 1910-1930s:

“Great Migration”; today: west & south)

transhumance: semi-nomadic migration

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i. Political circumstancesi. Political circumstances

Haiti Mariel Boatlift

Page 9: migration: the permanent long-term relocation from one place to another.
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Economic Opportunities

In late 1800s and early 1900s, Chinese migrated throughout Southeast Asia to work in trade, commerce, and finance.

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Guatemalans

Vietnamese

Rwandans

Bosnians

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Irish Population 1872

The Irish Potato Famine

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Pakistan-India Partition Russian Jews arriving in Israel

The Mormon Trek

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Push Factors: negative home conditions that “push” the decision to migrate (loss of job, lack of opportunities, overcrowding, famine, war, disease)

Pull Factors: positive attributes perceived to exist at the new location (jobs opportunities, better climate, lower taxes, more room, safer)

place utility: degree of satisfaction with a place

The decision to migrate: is it better to stay or to go?

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- have short term work visas- send remittances to home country

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Step migration: smaller, less extreme moves

Ex.: farm to village—to small town—to major city

Chain migration: an established linkage or chain for future migrants (creates a “migration field”)

• Migrants provide information, money, place to stay, a job for other family/friends

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Channel Migration: clear pathways & travel routes are established

- Ex.: The Oregon Trail

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The complex route of one group of undocumented migrants from

a small village north of Mexico City to Phoenix, Arizona

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1. Most only go a short distance

2. Longer distances = bigger cities

3. It proceeds step by step

4. Most is rural to urban

5. Each flow produces a counter flow

6. Most are adults

7. Most international migrants are young males1. Nowadays, women/girls represent 40-60% of all international

migrants.2. Mostly economic pushes and pulls.

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1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, a refugee is a person with: “a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race,

religion, or nationality.”

RWANDA 1994

DARFUR 2007

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The conflict in Darfur has led to the death of at least 350,000 and the displacement of 1.8 million people.

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A Darfur rebel fighter

Members of a Janjaweed militia group

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