+ All Categories
Home > Documents > CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 3

Date post: 22-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: dai
View: 40 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
CHAPTER 3. MIGRATION. GEOGRAPHY & MIGRATION. HGs look at: From where people migrate To where people migrate Why people migrate. MIGRATION cont. EMIGRATION. IMMIGRATION. To a location - When I was 12 I immigrated to Malvern from Exton. From a location - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
80
CHAPTER 3 MIGRATION
Transcript
Page 1: CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 3

MIGRATION

Page 2: CHAPTER 3

GEOGRAPHY & MIGRATION

• HGs look at:1. From where people

migrate2. To where people

migrate3. Why people migrate

Page 3: CHAPTER 3

MIGRATION cont.

EMIGRATION• From a location

- Three years ago I emigrated from Malvern to Downingtown

IMMIGRATION• To a location

- When I was 12 I immigrated to Malvern from Exton

Net Migration – difference between E and I(know positive/negative; net-in/net-out)

Page 4: CHAPTER 3

ISSUE #1

Why do People Migrate?

Page 5: CHAPTER 3

REASONS FOR MIGRATING• Most people migrate for

economic reasons

• Also migrate due to cultural and environmental factors

• Don’t forget the role of distance decay in this matter!!! (why more Mexican workers than Argentinean?)

Page 6: CHAPTER 3

DISTANCE

DECAY

Page 7: CHAPTER 3
Page 8: CHAPTER 3

PUSH/PULL FACTORS: ECONOMIC

– Better job opportunities may pull/bad economy may push

– Certain resources attract certain professions (petroleum may attract miners/engineers)

– Area with rapid population growth will pull in service workers (construction workers, restaurant workers)

Page 9: CHAPTER 3

Scene from The Grapes of Wrath

The Dust Bowl in the 1930s led to forced migration from the Great Plains to California and elsewhere.

Page 10: CHAPTER 3

PUSH/PULL FACTORS: CULTURAL

- Cultural factors such as slavery and political instability

- Creation of new countries with new boundaries (people on wrong side of the border – ex. India/Pakistan in late 1940s)

- Wars create refugees (ex. Sudan)

- Hope of democracy may pull people in (Cubans coming to America)

Page 11: CHAPTER 3

Refugees: Sources & Destinations

Fig. 3-1: Major source and destination areas of both international and internal refugees. KNOW THIS MAP!!!!!!

Page 12: CHAPTER 3

PUSH/PULL FACTORS: ENVIRONMENTAL

– Pull towards attractive areas (warm climates, mountains, beaches…)

– Health concerns may force them to seek a new climate

– Water issues/disasters force many to move (Hurricane Katrina)

– Droughts causes others to leave (Sahel region of northern Africa)

Page 13: CHAPTER 3

Hurricane Katrina Migrants

A major natural disaster represents an environmental push factor for forced migration.

Page 14: CHAPTER 3

INTERVENING OBSTACLES

• Before modern transportation they were mostly environmental (ex. Gold Rushers had a hard time getting to California……why?)

• More modern IOs include such things as government regulations (ex. Quotas)

Page 15: CHAPTER 3
Page 16: CHAPTER 3

INTERNAL MIGRATION• Permanent movement within the

same country

• Two types1. interregional – from one region of a country to another (ex. NE to West)- historically, the main type has been from rural to urban areas (why?)

2. intraregional – movement within one region (ex. Florida to Georgia)- historically, the main type has been within urban areas

Page 17: CHAPTER 3

INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION• Permanent movement from one

country to another

• Two types1. Voluntary – person chose to move for economic improvement

2. Forced – compelled to move due to cultural factors, felt they didn’t have a choice

*** be aware of migration transition (p.87)

*** you are responsible for “Characteristics of Migrants” on your own (pp. 87-88)

Page 18: CHAPTER 3

ISSUE #2

Where are Migrants Distributed?

Page 19: CHAPTER 3

GLOBAL MIGRATION PATTERNS• Net Out = Asia, Latin America,

Africa

• Net In = North America, Europe, Oceania

• Pattern of migration from LDCs to MDCs

• Highest percentage of immigrants is found in the Middle East (why?, doesn’t seem to make sense)

Page 20: CHAPTER 3

Global Migration Patterns

Fig. 3-2: The major flows of migration are from less developed to more developed countries.

Page 21: CHAPTER 3

Net Migration (per population)

Fig. 3-3: Net migration per 1000 population. The U.S. has the largest number of immigrants, but other developed countries also have relatively large numbers.

Page 22: CHAPTER 3

U.S. IMMIGRATION PATTERNS

• 3 main eras of migration:

1. colonial period2. mid-1800s-early 1900s3. 1970s-today

Page 23: CHAPTER 3

COLONIAL IMMIGRATION

• Came from Europe (voluntary) and Africa (forced)

• Prior to 1840, 90% of European immigrants came from G.B.

• 400,000 slaves before 1808; 250,000 after

Page 24: CHAPTER 3

Mid-1800s – EARLY 1900s

• U.S. offered the greatest hope of economic success (almost all during this Era were from Europe, the most from which country?)

• Europeans who didn’t come to the U.S. went mostly to temperate climates (ex. Canada, Australia, southern Africa, southern South America……why?)

• There have been three “peaks” of European immigration

Page 25: CHAPTER 3

3 PEAKSFIRST PEAK

- 1840s – 1850s

- more than 95% from N. and W. Europe (most from Ireland and Germany)

- mostly pushed by poor economic conditions and/or political unrest

SECOND PEAK

-1880s

- most from N. and W. Europe

- increasing amount from Scandinavian countries (increased population, as a result of the IR, was looking for opportunities)

THIRD PEAK

-Late 1890s – early 1900s (1915)

- more than 90% were European, but primarily from S. and SE. Europe

- most from different places (Italy, Russian, Austria-Hungary)

- similar to reasons in second peak

Page 26: CHAPTER 3

RECENT IMMIGRATION (1970s – today)

• Immigration dropped sharply during1930s and 1940s (why?)

• Has surged since the 1970s, most from Latin America and Asia

Page 27: CHAPTER 3

IMMIGRATION FROM ASIA• 7 million from Asia in last

25 years

• China, Philippines, India, Vietnam

• Many also go to Canada (Canada receives a higher % of Europeans and lower % of Latin Americans – what might explain this?)

Page 28: CHAPTER 3

IMMIGRATION FROM LATIN AMERICA

• 13 million from 1960 – 2005 (overtook Asia in the 1980s as the leading source of immigrants)

• Most from Mexico (compare to Germany) and The Dominican Republic

• Significant role played by the Immigration Reform and Control Act (1986)

• same reason as other regions (pushed by poor economic situation and pulled by economic opportunity)

Page 29: CHAPTER 3

Migration to U.S., by Region of Origin

Fig. 3-4: Most migrants to the U.S were from Europe until the 1960s. Since then, Latin America and Asia have become the main sources of immigrants.

Page 30: CHAPTER 3

Migration from Asia to the U.S.

Fig. 3-5: The largest numbers of migrants from Asia come from India, China, the Philippines, and Vietnam.

Page 31: CHAPTER 3

Migration from Latin America to the U.S.

Fig. 3-6: Mexico has been the largest source of immigrants to the U.S., but immigrants have also come from numerous other Latin American nations.

Page 32: CHAPTER 3

U.S. States as Immigrant Destinations

Fig. 3-8: California is the destination of about 25% of all US immigrants; another 25% go to New York and New Jersey. Other important destinations include Florida, Texas, and Illinois.

Page 33: CHAPTER 3

BIG PICTURE

• Pattern of immigration in U.S. has changed from mostly European to mostly Asian and Latin American

• Reasons remain the same, pushed by poor economic/political conditions and pulled by economic and social opportunities

Page 34: CHAPTER 3

review

1. During the late 20th century most immigrants came from ___ and ___2. One reason fewer Europeans migrate to the U.S. is due to the fact that they

have low _____ and _____ that can support the population. They are in stage ___

3. Crossing the U.S./Mexican border is relatively easy (T/F)4. Define “undocumented immigrant”5. List the 4 states in which more than 50% of recent immigrants are clustered6. More than ¼ of all undocumented immigrants are located in this state alone7. Define Chain migration8. Why have Mexican migrants recently started going to the Midwest in larger

numbers?9. What was the point and impact of the enclosure movement?

Page 35: CHAPTER 3

review

1. During the late 20th century most immigrants came from ___ and ___ (Asia and Latin America)

2. One reason fewer Europeans migrate to the U.S. is due to the fact that they have low _____ and _____ that can support the population. They are in stage ___ (natural increase rates; economies; 4)

3. Crossing the U.S./Mexican border is relatively easy (T)4. Define “undocumented immigrant” (people who enter the country without proper

documents)5. List the 4 states in which more than 50% of recent immigrants are clustered (California, New

York, Florida, Texas)6. More than ¼ of all undocumented immigrants are located in this state alone (California)7. Define Chain migration (the migration of people to a specific location, because relatives or

members of the same nationality migrated there)8. Why have Mexican migrants recently started going to the Midwest in larger numbers? (take

industrial jobs shunned by Americans)9. What was the point and impact of the enclosure movement? (to make farms in England

more efficient. It forced millions to emigrate from rural areas)

Page 36: CHAPTER 3

ISSUE #3

Why do Migrants Face Obstacles?

Page 37: CHAPTER 3

IMMIGRATION POLICIES of HOST COUNTRIES

• Two policies used by host countries to control arrival of foreigners seeking work:

1. Quota system2. Temporary Work

Page 38: CHAPTER 3

QUOTA LAWS• Quota Act (1921)• National Origins Act (1924)

– These two remained relatively unchanged until the 1960s

– European bias ????– Led to a decline in immigration

• By 1968 national quotas were replaced with “hemisphere” quotas

• Hemisphere quotas were replaced by global quotas in 1978 – breakdown of what type of people are

permitted? (most are to reunite families)– Does this apply to refugees?– Asians have very effectively used the family

preference strategy, leading to a great deal of chain migration

Page 39: CHAPTER 3

BRAIN DRAIN

• Effects of U.S. immigration policies on countries with a lot of emigrants – Some are unhappy that

they are losing this “brain power” to Europe and the U.S.

• Should the U.S. care?

Page 40: CHAPTER 3

TYPES OF TEMPORARY WORKERSGUEST WORKERS

• Citizens of poor countries who obtain jobs in Europe and the ME

• Take low-skilled, low-status jobs that locals don’t fill

• Benefits home and new country in different ways such as….?

• What protects them from exploitation?

• Most in Europe come from NA, ME, EE/SE and Asia– A lot of Turks in Germany

TIME-CONTRACT WORKERS

• Workers from Asia recruited for a fixed period for a specific job (railroads, mines, plantations…)

• Many stayed after that time expired

• Many Chinese living in other Asian nations

Page 41: CHAPTER 3

ECONOMIC MIGRANT OR REFUGEE?(why does it matter?)

Cuban emigrants are seen as political refugees since the ’59 revolution - concentrated in Florida

Haitians were considered economic, not political refugees in the ‘80s until changed by a lawsuit by the Haitian people

Surge of Vietnamese to U.S. after 1975 created some issues (boat people)-2nd surge in late ‘80s to other Asian nations- about 800,000 have ended up in the U.S.

Page 42: CHAPTER 3

CULTURAL PROBLEMS FACED WHILE LIVING IN OTHER COUNTRIES

U.S. Attitudes toward Immigrants

• 19th century – immigrants were often viewed with suspicion but helped settle new territories and extend U.S. control

• Opposition increased in early 20th century as the frontier “closed”

• Recent issues about things such as allowing/denying undocumented immigrants access to public services such as schools, day-care centers, health clinics…

Europe & Guest Workers

• Isolated (usually arrive alone, send most money back home, experience language & cultural barriers)

• Some natives dislike/fear guest workers (why?)

• Recent efforts in Europe and ME to reduce the # of guest workers due to lower economic growth

• Troubles in Fiji?

Page 43: CHAPTER 3

ISSUE #4

Why do People Migrate Within a Country?

Page 44: CHAPTER 3

TYPES OF INTERNAL MIGRATRION (WITHIN THE SAME COUNTRY)

INTERREGIONAL(between regions)

• Usually between rural and urban areas

INTRAREGIONAL(within the same region)

• Usually from older cities to suburbs

Page 45: CHAPTER 3

MIGRATION BETWEEN REGIONS WITHIN THE U.S.

• Interregional was more prevalent in the past (why?)

• Most famous example of large-scale internal migration in U.S. history? (interregional or intraregional?)

• Population center has changed over the past 200 years (how? Why?)

Page 46: CHAPTER 3

Interregional Migration in the U.S.

Fig. 3-13: Average annual migrations between regions in the U.S. in 1995 and in 2003

Page 47: CHAPTER 3

Intraregional Migration in the U.S.

Fig. 3-14: Average annual migration among urban, suburban, and rural areas in the U.S. during the 1990s. The largest flow was from central cities to suburbs.

Page 48: CHAPTER 3

CHANGING CENTERS OF POPULATION IN U.S.

EARLY SETTLEMENT OF THE INTERIOR SETTELEMENT OF

THE GREAT PLAINS

RECENT GROWTH OF THE SOUTH

- See worksheet

Page 49: CHAPTER 3

Center of Population in the U.S.

Fig. 3-12: The center of U.S. population has consistently moved westward, with the migration of people to the west. It has also begun to move southward with migration to the southern sunbelt.

Page 50: CHAPTER 3

MIGRATION WITHIN ONE REGION(WITHIN THE SAME COUNTRY)

• Much more intraregional than interregional migration today

• Usually from rural to urban areas

• Today nearly ½ of world’s population lives in urban areas, in 1800 it was about 5%

Page 51: CHAPTER 3

MIGRATION FROM RURAL TO URBAN

• Industrialization in 1800s led to larger urban populations

• ¾ of current U.S. population lives in urban areas (5% in 1800)

• In LDCs this has skyrocketed and accounts for 50% of population increase in those areas (ex. Sao Paulo, Brazil)

Page 52: CHAPTER 3

Brasilia, Brazil

Brasilia was created as Brazil’s new capital in 1960 and since then has attracted thousands of migrants in search of jobs.

Page 53: CHAPTER 3

MIGRATION FROM URBAN TO SUBURBAN

• In MDCs most intraregional migration is from cities to suburbs (opposite in LDCs)

• Unlike other migration, reasons are not related to employment (pulled by lifestyle)

• Consequences include converting farms to developments, more roads, sewers, schools….

Page 54: CHAPTER 3

MIGRATION FROM METROPOLITAN TO NONMETROPOLITAN

• New trend in late 1990s, more people in MDCs immigrated into rural areas than emigrated out of them (counterurbanization)

• Why? – growth of suburbs, lifestyle, less isolation with new technologies, retirees, leisure activities

Page 55: CHAPTER 3

Chapter 03: Review

Page 56: CHAPTER 3

03.01 Which of the following is the strongest push factor for international migration?

1. Political instability2. High living standards3. Severe weather 4. Inadequate supplies of agricultural land5. Family disagreements

Page 57: CHAPTER 3

03.01 Which of the following is the strongest push factor for international migration?

1. Political instability2. High living standards3. Severe weather 4. Inadequate supplies of agricultural land5. Family disagreements

Page 58: CHAPTER 3

03.02 In 2007, which of the following countries had the greatest number of internal refugees?

1. Poland2. Brazil3. United States4. China5. Iraq

Page 59: CHAPTER 3

03.02 In 2007, which of the following countries had the greatest number of internal refugees?

1. Poland2. Brazil3. United States4. China5. Iraq

Page 60: CHAPTER 3
Page 61: CHAPTER 3

03.03 Moving from San Francisco to Iowa would be considered

1. International migration2. Intraregional migration3. Interregional migration4. Forced migration5. Net migration

Page 62: CHAPTER 3

03.03 Moving from San Francisco to Iowa would be considered

1. International migration2. Intraregional migration3. Interregional migration4. Forced migration5. Net migration

Page 63: CHAPTER 3

03.04 The largest source of international migrants is

1. North America2. South America3. Africa4. Asia5. Europe

Page 64: CHAPTER 3

03.04 The largest source of international migrants is

1. North America2. South America3. Africa4. Asia5. Europe

Page 65: CHAPTER 3
Page 66: CHAPTER 3

03.05 The most likely destination of international migrants is

1. North America2. South America3. Africa4. Asia5. Europe

Page 67: CHAPTER 3

03.05 The most likely destination of international migrants is

1. North America2. South America3. Africa4. Asia5. Europe

Page 68: CHAPTER 3
Page 69: CHAPTER 3

03.06 In which decade was immigration into the United States the lowest?

1. 1880s2. 1900s3. 1930s4. 1970s5. 1990s

Page 70: CHAPTER 3

03.06 In which decade was immigration into the United States the lowest?

1. 1880s2. 1900s3. 1930s4. 1970s5. 1990s

Page 71: CHAPTER 3
Page 72: CHAPTER 3

03.07 Which country has been the largest source of immigrants from Asia to the United States over the last two decades?

1. Vietnam2. Philippines3. South Korea4. Japan5. India

Page 73: CHAPTER 3

03.07 Which country has been the largest source of immigrants from Asia to the United States over the last two decades?

1. Vietnam2. Philippines3. South Korea4. Japan5. India

Page 74: CHAPTER 3
Page 75: CHAPTER 3

03.08 The greatest number of undocumented immigrants in the United States come from

1. Canada2. Mexico3. Caribbean4. Europe5. Asia

Page 76: CHAPTER 3

03.08 The greatest number of undocumented immigrants in the United States come from

1. Canada2. Mexico3. Caribbean4. Europe5. Asia

Page 77: CHAPTER 3

03.09 Cuban emigrants to the United States

1. Are considered political refugees2. Typically support Fidel Castro3. Settle primarily in and around New York City4. Are usually turned back at sea5. Usually try to return to Cuba

Page 78: CHAPTER 3

03.09 Cuban emigrants to the United States

1. Are considered political refugees2. Typically support Fidel Castro3. Settle primarily in and around New York City4. Are usually turned back at sea5. Usually try to return to Cuba

Page 79: CHAPTER 3

03.10 Which of the following was a new trend in western countries in the 1990s?

1. Urbania2. Rural to urban migration3. Counterurbanization 4. Urban to urban migration5. Suburban to suburban migration

Page 80: CHAPTER 3

03.10 Which of the following was a new trend in western countries in the 1990s?

1. Urbania2. Rural to urban migration3. Counterurbanization 4. Urban to urban migration5. Suburban to suburban migration


Recommended