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Chapter 3 - Migration

Chapter 3 - Migration. Define migration permanent move to new location emigration v. immigration. II. Why people migrate Push & pull factors B. Economic C. Cultural/social D. Environmental. Who migrates Demographics Gender Marital status Age Education – brain drain.

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Chapter 3 - Migration

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  1. Chapter 3 - Migration • Define migration • permanent move to new location • emigration v. immigration

  2. II. Why people migrate • Push & pull factors B. Economic C. Cultural/social D. Environmental

  3. Who migrates • Demographics • Gender • Marital status • Age • Education – brain drain

  4. Refugees: Sources & Destinations • B. Involuntary (forced) • Refugees - 2009 Stats

  5. Syria 2013 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjN28GraSPQ?v=pjN28GraSPQ

  6. Slaves – • Historical • Modern - US- Tomatoland • Sugarcane in Dom. Republic

  7. IV. Where people migrate • Terms • 1. International • 2. Internal – interregional • intraregional • Streams / counterstreams • chain migration • C. Distance • D. Intervening obstacles

  8. Migration streams

  9. V. Internat. migration • Global trends

  10. B. Europe – Guest workers French riots

  11. C. US immigration patterns • Colonial – Europe, Africa • 19th cent – North , West Eur • early 20th – South, East Eur • 1970s-80s- Asia • 1990s- present – Lat Amer • D. US policy – 1920s Quota Act, • National Origins Act • E. US – illegal or “undocumented” • economic migrants v. refugees Graphic

  12. 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.

  13. Migration from Asia to the U.S.

  14. Migration from Latin America to the U.S.

  15. U.S. - Mexico Borderat Tijuana

  16. VI. Intranational (internal) migration • Global trends – rural to urban Urban to suburban Counterurbanization B. US

  17. U.S. Interregional Migration, 1995 & 2011 2011 US migration trends

  18. Net Migration by County, 2000-10

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