Migrationguidestudent
Migrationguidestudent
Migrationguidestudent
Types of Migration
Internal Migration: Moving to a new home within a state, country, or continent.
External Migration: Moving to a new home in a different state, country, or continent.
Emigration: Leaving one country to move to another (e.g., the Pilgrims emigrated from
England).
Immigration: Moving into a new country (e.g., the Pilgrims immigrated to America).
Population Transfer: When a government forces a large group of people out of a region,
usually based on ethnicity or religion. This is also known as an involuntary or forced
migration.
Impelled Migration (also called "reluctant" or "imposed" migration): Individuals are
not forced out of their country, but leave because of unfavorable situations such as warfare,
political problems, or religious persecution.
Step Migration: A series of shorter, less extreme migrations from a person's place of origin
to final destinationsuch as moving from a farm, to a village, to a town, and finally to a city.
Chain Migration: A series of migrations within a family or defined group of people. A chain
migration often begins with one family member who sends money to bring other family
members to the new location. Chain migration results in migration fieldsthe clustering of
people from a specific region into certain neighborhoods or small towns.
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Return Migration: The voluntary movements of immigrants back to their place of origin.
This is also known as circular migration.
Seasonal Migration: The process of moving for a period of time in response to labor or
climate conditions (e.g., farm workers following crop harvests or working in cities off-season;
"snowbirds" moving to the southern and southwestern United States during winter).
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Place Utility: The desirability of a place based on its social, economic, or environmental
situation, often used to compare the value of living in different locations. An individuals idea
of place utility may or may not reflect the actual conditions of that location.
Intervening Opportunities: Opportunities nearby are usually considered more attractive
than equal or slightly better opportunities farther away, so migrants tend to settle in a
location closer to their point of origin if other factors are equal.
Distance Decay: As distance from a given location increases, understanding of that location
decreases. People are more likely to settle in a (closer) place about which they have more
knowledge than in a (farther) place about which they know and understand little.
Laws of Migration
Geographer E.G. Ravenstein developed a series of migration 'laws' in the 1880s that form the
basis for modern migration theory. In simple language, these principles state:
Impacts of Migration
Human migration affects population patterns and characteristics, social and cultural patterns
and processes, economies, and physical environments. As people move, their cultural traits
and ideas diffuse along with them, creating and modifying cultural landscapes.
Diffusion: The process through which certain characteristics (e.g., cultural traits, ideas,
disease) spread over space and through time.
Relocation Diffusion: Ideas, cultural traits, etc. that move with people from one place to
another and do not remain in the point of origin.
Expansion Diffusion: Ideas, cultural traits, etc., that move with people from one place to
another but are not lost at the point of origin, such as language.
Cultural markers: Structures or artifacts (e.g., buildings, spiritual places, architectural
styles, signs, etc.) that reflect the cultures and histories of those who constructed or occupy
them.
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Measuring Migration
In-migration: people moving into one place from another place within a nation (internal
migration).
Out-migration: people moving out of one place to another place within a nation (internal
migration).
Gross migration: total number of in-migrants and out-migrants (internal migration).
Net internal migration: the difference between in-migration and out-migration.
Movers from abroad: people coming into a nation from another country or part of the
world.
Net migration: the difference between net internal migration and movers from abroad.
Migrations Resources
U.S. Census Bureau
http://www.census.gov/
Population Reference Bureau
http://www.prb.org/Content/NavigationMenu/PRB/Educators/Human_Population/Migration2/M
igration1.htm
CSISS Classics: Ernest George RavensteinThe Laws of Migration, 1885
http://www.csiss.org/classics/content/90
Ancestry.com: Thirteen Reasons Our Ancestors Migrated
http://www.ancestry.com/learn/library/article.aspx?article=1436
AngliaCampus: Migration
http://www.angliacampus.com/public/sec/geog/migrate/index.htm
RevisionNotes.Co.UK: Migration
http://www.revision-notes.co.uk/revision/171.html
Smithsonian Institution: Migrations in History
http://smithsonianeducation.org/migrations/start.html
Migration Information Source
http://www.migrationinformation.org/
UNHCR: The UN Refugee Agency
http://www.unhcr.ch/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home
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