migration haitian refugeessalinas, ca. migration – 3 key ideas at the end of this section you...

33
Migratio n Haitian Refugees Salinas, CA

Upload: owen-montgomery

Post on 25-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Migration

Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA

Page 2: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Migration – 3 Key Ideas

At the end of this section you should be able to explain:

1. Who Chooses to Migrate and Why

2. The World’s Major Migration Flows Today and In the Past

3. How Migration Challenges and Patterns Differ Between the Wealthiest and Poorest Nations

Page 3: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Why do people migrate?• Push Factors • Pull Factors

Major International Migration Patterns, Early 1990s

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Emigration and immigrationChange in residence.Relative to origin and destination.

Page 4: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Types of Migration• Voluntary migration

– The migrant makes the decision to move.– Most migration is voluntary.– Push and Pull Factors determine whom and

where.• Forced Migration

– Involuntary migration in which the mover has no role in the decision-making process.

– Slavery.• About 11 million African slaves were brought to

the Americas between 1519 and 1867.• In 1860, there were close to 4 million slaves in the

United States.– Refugees.– Military conscription.– Children of migrants.

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 5: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Types of Migration• Circular migration

– A type of temporary migration.

– Associated with agricultural work.

– The migrant follows the harvest of various crops, moving from one place to another each time.

– Very common in the US Southwest (Mexican farm workers) and in Western Europe (Eastern European farm workers).

Fall / Winter

Spring Summer

Page 6: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Types of Migration• Sojourners

– These workers intend to stay only until they save enough money to return to their homeland with wealth.

– Common in the U.S. with Italians between 1890-1910. Common now with workers from Latin America.

– Remittances are a substantial part of the economy of some migrant source countries.

Page 7: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Human Expansion: based on mitochondrial DNA study of Homo

sapiens

Page 8: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

World Migration Routes Since 1700

European

African (slaves)

Indian

Chinese

Japanese

Majority of population descended from immigrants

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 9: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Current World Migration Patterns

Click on Map For Interactive Use

Page 10: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

World Refugee Patterns, 2007

Page 11: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Key Term: Forced Migration

Page 12: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Slaves Reaching British North America, 1601-1867 (in 1,000s)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

1601-1650

1676-1700

1701-1725

1726-1750

1751-1775

1776-1800

1801-1825

1826-1850

1851-1867

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 13: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Forced Migration

The Trail of Tears, 1838

Page 14: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

U.S. Immigration

Prior to 1840, 90% of U.S.immigration was from Britain

Two Big Waves:

1840 - 1930: W. and N. European transitioning to Southern and Eastern European by 1910

– Irish (potato famine in 1840s) and Germans– During 1900s: Italians, Russians, Austria-Hungary (Czech,

Poland, Romania, etc.) 1950 - Today: Asians and Latin Americans; declining

Europeans– Asians: China, India; 1980s -1990s: Phillipines, Vietnam, and

South Korea– Latin America: Mexico, Dom. Rep., El Salvador, Cuba, Haiti

1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act admitted former illegals in 1990, 1991.

Ellis Island National Monument

Page 15: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

U.S. ImmigrationPrior to 1840, 90% of U.S.

immigration was from BritainThree trends:

Destinations of U.S. Immigrants - ethnic neighborhoods often result of chain migration– Mexicans: California, Texas, Illinois, New York– Caribbean: Florida or New York– Chinese and Indians: New York & California– Other Asians (Filipino, Vietnamese, etc.): California– Irish?– Italians?– Armenians?

Ellis Island National Monument

Page 16: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

U.S. Immigration Policies 1882, Bars Asian immigration for ten years (extended) 1921, Quota Act - country by country quotas 1924 National Origins Act - country by country quotas 1965, Immigration Act - quotas for countries replaced, in

1968, with hemisphere quotas of 170, 000 for East and 120,000 for West Relatives and family member preference begins

1978, Immigration Act - global quota of 290, 000 1980, Refugee Act - quotas do not apply to those seeking

political asylum 1986, Immigration Reform and Control Act admitted large

numbers of former illegals. 1990, Immigration Act raised global quotas to roughly

675,000 1995, visas begin to be issued preferentially:

Relatives and family members get overwhelming priority (see next slide)

Current Total (2004): 950,000 legal entries

Page 17: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and
Page 18: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and
Page 19: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

US Population by Race and Ethnicity, 1990-2050

75.669.1

6253

912.5

1824

11.712.1 13 14

3.6 6.3 7 9

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

1990 2000 2025 2050

Asian/ OtherBlackHispanicWhite

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 20: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and
Page 21: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Top 10 Countries of Origin for US Legal Immigrants,

19980 50000 100000 150000

Mexico

China

India

Philippines

Dominican Republic

Vietnam

Cuba

Jamaica

El Salvador

Korea

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 22: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Illegal Aliens in the United States by Country of Origin, 1996 (in

1,000s)

2700

335

165

120

105

95

90

70

70

70

0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000

Mexico

El Salvador

Guatemala

Canada

Haiti

Philippines

Honduras

Poland

Nicaragua

Bahamas

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 25: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Population Pyramid of Native and Foreign Born Population, United States, 2000 (in

%)

8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8

Percent

Male Female FemaleMale

Foreign Born Native

8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8

0-4

5-9

10-14

15-19

20-24

25-29

30-34

35-39

40-44

45-49

50-54

55-59

60-64

65-69

70-74

75-79

80-84

85+

Percent

Age

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 26: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Voluntary African-American Migrations

Blacks moved to The Industrial Belt (i.e., Chicago, New York, Detroit) and California during labor shortages.

The culture of the receiving regions was affected by these changes. Can you think of specific cultural traits were added to the new regions by the arrival of large numbers of blacks?

Page 27: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Migration by Major Metropolitan Areas in the United States, 1990-98

(in 1,000s)-1750 -1250 -750 -250 250 750 1250

New York

Los Angeles

San Francisco

Chicago

Miami

Atlanta

Las Vegas

Phoenix

Portland

Denver

Immigration

Net domesticmigration

Slide graphic courtesy of Dr. Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Hofstra University

Page 28: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Interregional MigrationsU.S. population has been moving Westward

and Southward Gold Rush (1849) and Donner Party just the most

dramatic examples of hardship.– Wells, Pumps, Aqueducts, Mosquito Control and Air Conditioning

have allowed this move which otherwise would be impossible. Loss of Industrial Jobs in east compliments increase in

Sunbelt service sector (biotech, communications).

Page 29: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

The Ten Fastest-Growing Metropolitan Areas, 1990–2000

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000; 1990 Census. Web: www.census.gov

Population Change, 1990–2000Metropolitan area April 1, 1990 April 1, 2000 Number Percent

Las Vegas, Nev., Ariz. 852,737 1,563,282 710,545 83.3%Naples, Fla. 152,099 251,377 99,278 65.3Yuma, Ariz. 106,895 160,026 53,131 49.7McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Tex. 383,545 569,463 185,918 48.5Austin-San Marcos, Tex. 846,227 1,249,763 403,536 47.7Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, Ark. 210,908 311,121 100,213 47.5Boise, Idaho 295,851 432,345 136,494 46.1Phoenix-Mesa, Ariz. 2,238,480 3,251,876 1,013,396 45.3Laredo, Tex. 133,239 193,117 59,878 44.9Provo-Orem, Utah 263,590 368,536 104,946 39.8

Page 30: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

The Ten Fastest-Growing Metropolitan Areas, 2001-2006

Source: U.S. Census Bureau; 2006: Census. Web: www.census.gov

Page 31: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

The Ten Fastest-Growing Metropolitan Areas, 2008-2009

(plus four previous top ten cities that have slowed their growth)

Source: U.S. Census Bureau; 2006: Census. Web: www.census.gov

Page 32: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Internal Migrations in LDCs

Populations in the less developed world are rushing to cities in search of work and income.

Urbanization migration from rural areas lack of jobs in countryside lack of services in cities Tokyo, Los Angeles, and New York only MDC cities on top 10 list

Rank City Population1 Tokyo, Japan 28 million2 New York City, United States 20.1 million3 Mexico City, Mexico 18.1 million4 Mumbai, India (Bombay) 18 million5 Sao Paulo, Brazil 17.7 million6 Los Angeles, United States 15.8 million7 Shanghai, China 14.2 million8 Lagos, Nigeria 13.5 million9 Kolkata, India (Calcutta) 12.9 million

10 Buenos Aires, Argentina 12.5 million

Lagos, Nigeria Mumbai, India Mexico City, Mexico

Page 33: Migration Haitian RefugeesSalinas, CA. Migration – 3 Key Ideas At the end of this section you should be able to explain: 1. Who Chooses to Migrate and

Internal (interregional) Migrations in U.S.

For about 100 years the U.S. population has been moving out of the city centers to the suburbs: suburbanization and counterurbanization

U.S. intraregional migration during 1990s.

Developed Countries: suburbanization automobiles and roads‘American Dream’ better services lower taxes