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Ch. 3 Migration

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Title: Ch. 3 Migration


1
Ch. 3 Migration
2
What is Migration?
  • Movement of people across space
  • Speeds diffusion of ideas, intensifies spatial
    interaction, is linked to environment

3
Types of Movement
  • Cyclic Movement- involves shorter periods away
    begins at home and ends there as well
  • Activity Space movement is an example
  • Commuting to work is an example
  • (transportation has expanded activity spaces
    greatly)
  • Seasonal Movement also (traveling to FL for
    winter/summer and then back north)
  • Nomadism- takes place across familiar landscapes
    year round

4
What is activity space?
  • The great majority of people have a daily routine
    that takes them through a sequence of short moves
    that geographers call activity space.
  • America is the worlds most mobile society.
  • Technology has greatly expanded activity space,
    particularly in wealthier, more developed
    countries.

5
Periodic Movement- Longer period of time away,
but still returning home
  • Migrant Labor- (FL and California Fields)
  • Transhumance- pastoral farming where ranchers
    move livestock to pastures from mountains
  • In Switzerland, cattle are driven up the
    mountains in the summer and farm families take up
    residence in summer cottages.
  • College and Military service as well require you
    to be away for long periods of time

6
Migration- Permanent relocation across
significant distances
  • International migration- movement across country
    borders
  • Emigration (leaving country) Immigration
    (entering country)
  • Internal Migration- within a single countrys
    borders
  • Today most people are leaving NE to move south
    and west
  • US is most mobile population in the world
  • (5 mil state to state each year, 35 mil within
    state)

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11
Why do People Migrate?
  • Forced Migration- involves the imposition of
    authority or power to force another to move
  • Voluntary Migration-
  • Atlantic Slave Trade was most devastating in
    history
  • 12 million to 30 million moved from Africa to the
    Americas (p. 75 map)
  • Convicts shipped from Britain to Australia in
    1788
  • Nazi Germany relocated millions of Jews from
    their homes in the 1930s
  • Voluntary Migration- weigh choices and make
    decision to migrate or not

12
Forced Slave Migration
13
Push and Pull Factors in Voluntary Migration
  • Push Factor-
  • Pull Factor-
  • - conditions to cause a person to want to LEAVE a
    place (high crime)
  • circumstances that ATTRACT a person to a place
    (close to work, good yard)

14
What are push factors of migration?
  • Defined unfavorable characteristics of a locale
    that contribute to the dissatisfaction of its
    residents and impel their emigration
  • Examples widespread unemployment poverty
    discrimination political unrest war famine
    and/or drought land shortage overpopulation

15
What are pull factors of migration?
  • Defined characteristics of a locale that act as
    attractive forces, drawing migrants from other
    places
  • Examples employment opportunities political
    and/or personal freedoms (speech religion, right
    to vote, etc.) land amenities (e.g. retirement)
  • Important to note Many people move based on
    excessively positive images and expectations (not
    always accurate).

16
Ernst Ravensteins 5 laws of Migration
  • Every Migration flow generates a return or
    counter migration
  • Haitians from Florida
  • Afghans from Pakistan/Pakistan has forced the
    repatriation of thousands of Afghans.
  • The majority of migrants move short distances
  • Migrants that move longer distances tend to
    choose big-city destinations
  • Urban residents are less migratory than
    inhabitants of rural areas
  • Families are less likely to make international
    moves than young adults

17
Other terms important to migration
  • Distance Decay- migrants will move a shorter
    distance b/c they know more about what is near-
    says the further you are from a point, the fewer
    migrants you will find from that point
  • Step Migration- most migrants move from rural
    areas to a village, then a town, later a city,
    and finally a metropolis (large city)
  • Intervening Opportunity- During a long migration,
    the tendency to find a location to suit your
    purposes before reaching the intended destination
  • African Americans traveling north to find work
    after WWI would stop before reaching Chicago or
    St. Louis because they would find other work
    before they made it

18
Migration Terms
  • Brain Drain Large-scale emigration of talented
    people.
  • Illegal Immigration Illegally migrating to a
    place without specific permission by that
    country.
  • Intervening Obstacle An environmental or
    cultural feature that hinders migration.

19
Types of Push and Pull Factors
  • Economic Conditions- Poverty drives people to
    move away from their homes, also perceived
    opportunity in another country for work
  • Political Circumstances- Oppressive regimes cause
    people to flee their homelands
  • Armed Conflict and Civil War- Yugoslavias civil
    war drove out 3 million
  • Rwandas civil war caused 2 million to flee in
    Hutu / Tutsi conflict
  • Environmental Conditions- if crops destroyed,
    earthquakes, hurricanes, volcanic eruptions

20
Reasons continued
  • Environmental Conditions
  • Potato Famine in Ireland (1840s)
  • Major earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or
    hurricanes (Gulf Coast of U.S.2005)
  • Culture and Tradition
  • Muslims migrated from India when it was
    partitioned
  • Jews left the former Soviet Union for Israel

21
Other reasons/catalysts for migration
  • Armed conflict and civil war
  • Three million people drive from their homes in
    the former Yugoslavia
  • Civil war in Rwanda (Hutu and Tutsis)
  • Political circumstances
  • Oppressive regimes
  • Cuba
  • Vietnams boat people

22
Continued Push and Pull Factors
  • Culture and Traditions- Fear that your culture
    will be persecuted against
  • Muslims left India and created Pakistan b/c India
    was primarily Hindu
  • Technological Advances- Transportation
    communication make travel easier and people know
    more about far away places to travel there
  • Kinship Links- strengthened ties between family
    due to communication technology
  • Chain Migration- One member of family moves, then
    brings other to the new locale
  • Immigration Waves- Swells of migration from one
    place to the other same destination

23
Continued
  • Power Relationships (Gender, Ethnicity, Race,
    Money)
  • Women in the Middle East hire Southeast Asians to
    establish a position of power over them.
  • (Race) Carpet companies in Dalton, GA hire
    Mexican immigrants because they perceive them to
    be more hardworking and loyal.

24
Where do People Migrate?
  • Global Migration Flows
  • Before 1500- Random global-scale migration,
    1800s- colonization with explorers

25
International Migration
26
Regional Migration Flows
  • Economic Opportunities European colonialism
    brought islands of development- isolated areas of
    development in a port city usually
  • Most was based on trade, so people settled on
    coasts and in cities
  • Chinese moved to cities throughout SE Asia for
    work during colonialism stayed (p. 83 map)
  • Within West Africa, oil-producing areas of
    Nigeria are islands of development. Poor people
    for Togo, Benin, and Ghana flocked there for jobs
    and were later expelled by the Nigerian government

27
Reconnection of Cultural Groups
  • Jewish Immigrants returned to Israel after 1948
    when it was created

28
Conflict and War
  • 15 million Germans moved to E. Germany after
    WWII, almost 8 million others left Europe
    altogether
  • 1959 Fidel Castro took control of Cuba and began
    establishing a communist government. Cuban
    migration soared and the U.S. government
    formalized the Cuban Airlift for those who
    desired to escape communism. Many settled in the
    Miami area. Dade County is bicultural and
    bilingual. Later the wet foot-dry foot policy was
    adopted

29
National Migration Flows
  • Within USA- westward movement throughout history
  • After Civil War and WWII, northward movement for
    African Americans for work
  • After 1970s, trend reversed, moving people back
    south after Civil Rights Movement

30
Westward Movment of the U.S. Population
31
National Migration Trends
32
Interregional Migration - Movement From One
Region to Another
33
Movement of African Americans
34
Guest Workers
  • Europe lost so many people in WWII that they
    brought temporary workers called guest workers
    into their countries- problem was that most
    stayed!
  • They are legal immigrants who have work visas
    (usually short term)
  • They are often abused by their employers because
    they are unaware of their rights.

35
  • As the need for labor has declined host countries
    have tried to send them back (Nigeria). In some
    cases their governments bring them back, as in
    the case of Indonesia just before the Iraqi War,
    they pulled 30,000 Indonesians working in the
    Middle East.
  • Guest Workers alter the cultural landscape of the
    region building temples, mosques, restaurants,
    grocery stores, shops, and service industries.

36
Guest Workers
37
Refugees
  • -Large scale population movements can create
    problems (especially when forced by conflict)

38
UNHCR- United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees
  • Supports refugees
  • Funds relief efforts
  • Negotiates with governments
  • In 2007 UNHCR reported 11.4 million refugees (not
    including Palestinians in Jordan and Syria)
    forced from their homes and across country
    borders.
  • Internally displaced persons (IDPs) are people
    who have been displaced within their own
    countries (such as victims of Hurricane Katrina)
    but do not cross international borders as they
    flee. They remain uncounted.

39
Refugees-
  • a person who has a well founded fear of being
    persecuted for reasons of race, religion,
    nationality, membership of a particular social
    group or political opinion
  • -What is wrong with this statement? What words
    are up for interpretation?

40
  • In 2000, 24 million refugees
  • This number is in dispute, the number is probably
    higher
  • well founded leaves a lot of room for
    interpretation
  • Refugees often flee to remote areas and are not
    counted
  • Governments sometimes manipulate the numbers
  • Biggest problem with UN definition is with
    internal refugees (intranational refugees)
  • If you qualify as a refugee, you get some
    assistance and qualify for asylum

41
Characteristics of a Refugee
  • Most only take personal items that they can carry
  • Move by foot, boat, bike etc- (not using modern
    technology, not many resources)
  • Do not have official documents (passport, ID)

42
Regions of Dislocation
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Hutu and Tutsi in Rwanda civil war causing many
    refugees
  • Sudan has the worst refugee crisis in Africa
    today. Tensions have risen between Arab Muslims
    in the north and African Christians and animists
    to the south.
  • North Africa and SW Asia
  • Kurds, Palestinians, Afghans Iraq tried to
    nerve gas and kill its Kurd minority
  • The latest war in Iraq has generated 2 million
    refugees that are living in neighboring Syria and
    Jordan.

43
Refugees in Africa
44
  • South Asia
  • From Afghanistan into Pakistan war from the US
    causes migrants
  • Civil War in Sri Lanka between the Tamils and the
    Sinhalese has created 200,000 displaced person.
  • Southeast Asia
  • Vietnam created a mass exodus of 1 -2 million
    after the Communists took over it.
  • Cambodia generated 300,000 refugees during the
    Khmer Rouge campaign.
  • Myanmar in the site of internal refugees that are
    the result of the 2004 tsunami, 2008 cyclone, and
    oppressive rule.
  • Europe
  • Collapse of Yugoslavia- caused civil war and
    Muslims and Christians killed each other

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Boat People Refugees from Southeast Asia
47
Policies Targeting Migration
  • Legal and illegal immigration is an issue all
    over the world
  • Example- California wants federal aid to improve
    services for illegal immigration because the
    government cant control borders effectively
  • Arizona is trying to stiffen control on
    immigration
  • South Florida has both Cuban and Haitian illegal
    immigrants

48
Legal Restrictions
  • Immigration laws to keep out in the past
  • Chinese from California -Oriental Exclusion Acts
    (1882-1907)
  • Nonwhites from Australia- 1901- Immigration
    Restriction Act
  • The US limits immigrants from countries Following
    WWI, the U.S. turned to isolationism (staying out
    of entanglements abroad)

49
Other countries have immigration restrictions as
well
  • New Zealand prefers British background
  • Brazil- farming background
  • Singapore- financially secure Chinese

50
Post-September 11th Migration
  • Prior to September 11th U.S. border patrol was
    concerned primarily with drug traffickers and
    human smugglers.
  • Post-September 11th policies have affected asylum
    seekers, illegal immigrants, and legal
    immigrants.
  • Security concerns have been priority for
    migration laws

51
  • 33 countries identified as sites where al-Qaeda
    or other terrorist groups operate
  • Anyone from these countries seeking asylum
    (safety) is detained and questioned
  • Fence on Mexico border is intended to keep
    terrorists from using Mexico as a staging point
    for bombs, etc.
  • Human Rights First, Amnesty International, and
    the Migration Policy Institute claim the new
    government crackdown violated civil liberties,
    slows traffic, the flow of business, and tourism.

52
Case Study The US-Mexican Border
53
The US Border looking into Mexico
54
Flood lights illuminate the border
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Border Patrol
57
Million Dollar Mile
58
Border Patrol
59
Million Dollar Mile
60
Looking into the US
61
The Great Divide Mexico is on the right
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