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Migration
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What are the 3 Types of Movement?
Cyclic Movement Periodic Movement Migration
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What is Cyclic Movement?
Journeys that begin at our home base and bring us back to it Daily routines create Activity spaces- the space in which daily activities occur The scale of activity space varies across society The average North American covers a greater amount of territory than that of an average African. Why?
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Cyclic Movement Commuting- from home to work and home again, ranging from minutes to hours The average North American commuter travels a greater distance each day than the average Chinese villager does in a year. Ex: D. C. area people travel 100 miles each way on commuter trains and metro from surrounding suburbs or states
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Cyclic Movement Seasonal Movement- moving for a period of time in response to labor or climate conditions (Ex: farm workers following crop harvest or working in cities off-season, “snowbirds” moving to the southern United States during the winter) Economic consequences; depopulates the north, but develops the tourist centers in the south Electoral consequences; permanent place of residence Nomadism- a form of survival, culture and tradition, they know territory well to find food, water and shelter; still seen in Africa and Asia
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Nomadism
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What is Periodic Movement?
Movement that involves a longer period of time away from the home base Migrant labor- workers worldwide who cross international borders in search of employment and often times become immigrants People who come to work in the farm fields of California and Florida
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Periodic Movement Transhumance- a system or pastoral farming where ranchers move livestock according to the seasonal availability of pastures. Ex: In Switzerland during the summer cattle is driven up the slopes to high fresh pastures, farm families follow the herds and live in cottages that are abandoned during the cold winter
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Periodic Movement Military Service- 10 million U. S. citizens are moved to new location where they will spend tours of duty that can last several years
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What is Migration? A type of relocation diffusion
The movement of people from one place to another for the purpose of taking up permanent or semipermanent residence
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Global Migration Patterns
What do you notice about the overall pattern of global migration?
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International Migration/ Transnational Migration
Movement across country borders When a migrant leaves the home country, he’s classified as an emigrant of the home country (EX: the pilgrims emigrated from England) When the same migrant enters a country he’s classified as an immigrant in the new country (EX: the pilgrims immigrated to America)
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Internal Migration Migration that occurs within a single country’s borders; varies according to mobility of the population EX: Early twentieth century African American families in the U. S. moved from the South to industrialized cities in the Northeast and Midwest. Why?
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Intervening Opportunity
The presence of a nearer opportunity that greatly diminishes the attractiveness of sites farther away This happened when African Americans migrated north to seek work in growing cities like Chicago and Cleveland. Many found employment in St. Louis and Cincinnati, showing they encountered intervening opportunities along their northbound routes. How is this different than Intervening Obstacle?
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Interregional vs. Intraregional Migration
Interregional is movement from one region to another region, where intraregional is movement within one region. Interregional- from rural area to city Intraregional- from city to nearby suburb 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.
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Interregional Migration in the US
Average annual migrations between regions in the U.S. in 1995 and in 2000.
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Measuring Migration Net Migration- the difference between the number of immigrants and the number of emigrants. - Net In- Migration- number is positive, immigrants exceeds emigrants - Net Out- Migration- number is negative, emigrants exceeds immigrants
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Net Migration (per population)
Fig. 3-3: Net migration per 1,000 population. The U.S. has the largest number of immigrants, but other developed countries also have relatively large numbers.
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Credits Rubenstein, J. M. An Introduction to Human Geography, The Cultural Landscape, 8th edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ, 2008 De Blij, H. J, Erin Fouberg, and Alexander Murphy. Human Geography People, Place, and Culture 9th Edition. New Jersey: Wiley, 2009 An Introduction to Human Geography, The Cultural Landscape, 8e, James M. Rubenstein
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