UN released a report on the top source and destination of asylum seekers. Name the 10 sources of Asylum Seekers & Destinations
10 countries of origin
1. Iraq
2. Afghanistan
3. Somalia
4. China
5. Serbia
7. Russia
8. Nigeria
9. Mexico
10. Zimbabwe
10 Destination Countries
1. USA
2.France
3. Canada
4. UK
5. Germany
6. Sweden
7. Italy
8. Greece
9. Norway
10. Switzerland
Migration Models & Theories LEARNING OBJECTIVES 1.TO EXPLAIN DIFFERENT MIGRATION MODELS & THEORIES 2.TO COMPARE THE ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF THE DIFFERENT MIGRATION THEORIES
Ravenstein’s Laws 1.Most migrants move only short distances –Inverse relationship between number of migrants and distance travelled 2.People who move long distances are largely unaware of the opportunities available at their destination – so move to large urban centres 3.Migration occurs in stages 4.People in rural areas more likely to migrate than those in urban centres
Ravenstein’s Law 5.A typical migrant I.Women more likely to migrate within their country than men II.Men are more likely to emigrate than women III.Most migrants are adult
Gravity Model The volume of migration is inversely proportional to the distance travelled and directly proportional to the relative sizes of the origin and destination places.
Stouffer’s Intervening Opportunity Model The level of movement of people between two places is dependent upon the type and number of intervening opportunities. So the nature of places is more important than the distance.
Stepwise Migration Model
Behavioral Model that migration occur in stages with a ‘wave-like’ motion. Major settlements tend to attract migrants from smaller cities, which attract. M igrants from smaller towns and villages
Lee’s Migration Model
Zelinsky’s Model of Mobility Transition
The essential feature of the model is based on Rostow;s stages of economic growth. As modernisation proceeds different patterns of migration emerge. Zelinsky’s Model of Mobility Transition