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Migration – Forced and Voluntary 11/16. Bell-ringer: What are 3 examples of “forced” migration? What are 3 examples of “voluntary” migration? What is the difference?. Forced Migration. Human migration flows in which the movers have no choice but to relocate
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Migration – Forced and Voluntary 11/16 Bell-ringer: What are 3 examples of “forced” migration? What are 3 examples of “voluntary” migration? What is the difference?
Forced Migration • Human migration flows in which the movers have no choice but to relocate • Examples: African Slave Trade; Native Americans out of the East (Trail of Tears); Palestinians out of Palestine; Vietnamese Boat People; Irish Potato Famine
“Boat People” People who fled Vietnam after the Vietnam War by boat. However, people fleeing islands in the Caribbean and S.E. Asia (places where there are a lot of islands) are often called “boat people”
Picture of Native Americans forced West by Andrew Jackson’s soldiers
Refugee (an officially recognized term) • A person who flees across an international boundary because of a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion. Asylum Seeker: A person who wants to be recognized as a refugee in the country s/he is going, so that s/he can legally migrate to that country.
Regions of Dislocation – (Displaced Persons)What regions generate the most refugees? • Sub-Saharan Africa (Rwanda) • North Africa and Southwest Asia (Sudan & Somalia, Afghanistan) • South Asia (India, Sri Lanka) • Southeast Asia (Myanmar, Cambodia, Vietnam) • Europe (Former Soviet Countries)
UN reports 24 million refugees worldwide • International refugees cross one or more borders and are encamped in a country not their own. • Intranational refugees abandon their homes, but not their countries-this is the largest number world wide. • Also known as (IDP – Internally Displaced Refugees)
What do you notice about the source of refugees and the direction/distance they migrate?
Palestinian Refugees The circles are refugee camps
Voluntary Migration • Human migration flows in which the movers respond to perceived opportunity, not force. • New Jobs • More freedom
Kinds of Voluntary Migration • Step Migration – When a migrant follows a path of a series of stages, or steps toward a final destination. * intervening opportunity –at one of the steps along the path, pull factors encourage the migrant to settle there. • Chain Migration – When a migrant communicates to family and friends at home, encouraging further migration along the same path, along kinship links.
Examples of Chain Migration in the US • 66.5% of Cubans settle in Miami area • 33% of Salvadorans in LA area; 16% in Washington DC; another 15% in NYC area. • Haitians in S. Florida and NYC • Chinese in CA and NYC area • Dominicans in S. Florida and NYC area • Vietnamese in CA, Washington, DC, NY • Bosnians in Washington, DC., St. Louis, and Phoenix • Chicago has more Polish people than any other place except Warsaw, Poland.
Homework Reflection • What do you think is the difference between economic migrants and refugees? Explain • FINISH FRQ!