The most common form of migration, it is when people migrate from the country to the city.
What is rural to urban migration?
A model that illustrates how a country's population growth rate changes as it develops economically. We can use this model to determine what stage of development a country is in.
What is the Demographic Transition Model (DTM)?
Limiting the number of children allowed per family through legal measures is an example of this type of policy.
What is an antinatalist policy?
Refugees, asylum seekers, and internally displaced persons all fall under this type of migration because they feel they HAVE to migrate to survive.
What is forced/involuntary?
A person who has left their country and is seeking protection from persecution in another country, but who hasn't yet been legally recognized.
What is an asylum seeker?
The movement of people in a series of stages, often from rural to urban areas
What is Step Migration?
In this stage of the DTM, there is a moderate growth rate due to declining birth rates while death rates remain low or continue to fall.
What is stage 3?
Offering generous parental leave and childcare subsidies to encourage couples to have more children is an example of this type of policy.
What is a pronatalist policy?
the Rustbelt to the Sunbelt is an example of this type of migration when people choose to migrate.
What is voluntary?
A person(s) who has been forced to leave their country due to war, violence, or persecution and is recognized by the international community as needing to migrate.
What are refugees?
A potential alternative that can cause a person to settle in a different location than their original destination while migrating
What is an intervening opportunity?
This historical development, which involves a society advancing to become mechanized and able to mass produce, is the primary reason that agricultural - stage 2 - nations advance and reach stage three with stabilizing populations.
Industrialization
This country famously implemented a program that limited most families to one child each.
What is China?
What is causing this unusual shape to this pyramid?
What is a Guest Worker program
Someone who has been forced to leave their home but remains within their country's borders.
What is an internally displaced person (IDP)?
The difference between the number of people entering a country (immigration) and the number of people leaving (emigration) the same country.
What is Net Migration?
This is the difference between birth rates and death rates and is highest in a stage 2 country.
What is rate of natural increase (RNI)?
The following are examples of what?
What are Ravenstein's Laws of Migration?
The Potato Famine in Ireland that led to mass starvation and drove many people deciding to leave the country. An example of this type of factor.
What is a push factor?
This area of the world is expected to experience the most rapid population growth in coming decades.
What is Sub-Saharan Africa?
The Irish migration to the United States in the mid 1800s is an example of this...it involves people immigrating to a country to follow family or a community to a destination.
What is chain migration?
The industrial revolution contributes to this theory being wrong (at least in the short term)...
What is Malthusian Theory?
A concept that predicts the level of migration between two locations based on the idea that larger populations and closer proximity will attract more migration, similar to how gravity pulls objects closer together.
What is the gravity model of migration?
When a country loses a significant portion of its skilled and educated people it is known as...
Brain Drain
The former "Bracero Program" in the United States allowed Mexican workers to temporarily work in the US, primarily in agriculture, to address labor shortages during World War II. is an example of this.
What are guest workers?