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People Moving

People Moving. Canadian & World Issues. People Moving. Migration Refugees Urbanization. Migration. Migration is any movement by humans from one locality to another. Emigration Immigration Settling.

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People Moving

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  1. People Moving Canadian & World Issues

  2. People Moving • Migration • Refugees • Urbanization

  3. Migration • Migration is any movement by humans from one locality to another. • Emigration • Immigration • Settling A memorial statue in Hanko, Finland, commemorating the thousands of emigrants who left the country to start a new life in the United States

  4. Migration • Push Factors of Migration • War or other armed conflict • Famine or drought • Disease • Poverty • Political corruption • Disagreement with politics • Religious intolerance • Natural disasters • Lack of employment opportunities

  5. Migration • Pull Factors of Migration • Higher incomes • Lower taxes • Better weather • Better availability of employment • Better medical facilities • Better education facilities • Family reasons • Political stability • Religious tolerance • National prestige

  6. Migration • Barriers to Migration • Legal • Natural • Cultural (family, friends, religion) • Financial • Adaptation Fears • Fears of Not Being Accepted

  7. Migration • Effects of Migration • Changes in distribution of population • Mixing of different cultures and races • Demographic consequences (young on the move, leaving an aging population behind) • Economic results

  8. Refugees • Refugees are those seeking asylum in a foreign country in order to escape persecution, war, terrorism, extreme poverty, famines, and natural disaster. • United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) protects and supports refugees at the request of a government or the United Nations and assists in their return or resettlement.

  9. Refugees • According to the UN Declaration of Human Rights, refugees are people who cross the border of their country and enter another country. • Some people have to leave their homes, but are not able to cross a border – these people are identified as Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

  10. Refugees Nicaragua after Hurricane Mitch

  11. Refugees

  12. Refugees • Why people become refugees: • War (Inter-country or Intra-country) • Natural Disasters • Famine • Economic reasons • Political reasons

  13. Refugees • Where are refugees from? • Refugees have come from all around the globe • Africa • Asia • Latin America • Europe • North America • Today, the majority of refugees are from Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe.

  14. Refugees

  15. Refugees • UNHCR estimates over 17,000,000 refugees worldwide. • However, the true number is probably greater than this because many are not identified by international agencies. • US Committee for Refugees estimates that over 7 million refugees are in camps – so millions have no shelter or protection at all!

  16. Refugees • Rwandan Refugees

  17. Refugees in Canada • From 1995 to 2004 Canada welcomed more than 2.1 million immigrants. • This included 265,685 (12% of the whole) refugees granted permanent residence. How much do you know about Canada’s record towards refugees?

  18. Refugees in Canada • Refugee protection was not part of Canadian law until 1978. • Early immigration policy discriminated by race: British and northern Europeans were encouraged to immigrate whereas...

  19. Refugees in Canada • Chinese immigrants had to pay a Head Tax • Asians and others deemed undesirable were excluded by the "continuous passage" policy • Immigration Department used its discretion to discourage Black immigrants.

  20. Refugees in Canada South Asians came to Vancouver on the ship the Komagatu Maru in 1914 to test the "continuous journey” policy. They were refused entry.

  21. Refugees in Canada • In the 1930s and 1940s, thousands of European Jews tried to flee Nazi Germany. • Motivated by anti-semitism, the Canadian government used its discretion to exclude Jews.

  22. Refugees in Canada • 1951: The Geneva Convention relating to the status of refugees defined who was a refugee and their right to legal protection and assistance from those states who signed. • A refugee is any person who "owing to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable to, or owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country…"

  23. Urbanization • Urbanization is the movement of people up the urban hierarchy. hamlet village town suburb city metropolis • Can you identify the following cities from their skylines?

  24. Tokyo

  25. Melbourne

  26. Shanghai New York City

  27. Boston

  28. Cairo

  29. Singapore Kuala Lampur Petronas Towers

  30. Hong Kong

  31. Sao Paulo

  32. Toronto (Go Leafs Go!) Scotia Bank BMO CN Tower TD Canada Trust Eaton Centre

  33. Urbanization • Level v. rate of urbanization • US and UK (for example) have a higher urbanization level than China, India, or Nigeria. • There are more people living in urban areas in the developed world than in the developing world • China, India, and Nigeria (for example) have a higher urbanization rate than the US or the UK • People are moving from rural to urban areas at a faster pace in the developing world.

  34. Urbanization • Definitions of “urban centres” vary around the world • Canada: places of 1000 or more inhabitants having a population density of 400 or more per square km • Portugal: Agglomerations of 10,000 or more inhabitants • Norway: localities of 200 or more inhabitants • Botswana: agglomerations of 5000 or more inhabitants where 75% of the economic activity is of the non-agricultural type • Israel: All settlements of more than 2000 inhabitants, except those where at least one-third of the heads of household, participating in the civilian labour force, earn their living from agriculture

  35. Urbanization • Timeline • <1800s: 2% of the population lived in cities • 4000 BC in Mesopotamia and along the Nile and Yellow • Settlements were centres for merchants along trade routes • Settlements could provide such functions as: religion, culture, defence and trade • 1800s: Industrial Revolution • In Europe and North America, technological advancement (steam engine) led to large-scale manufacturing, requiring large labour force • 1950s: 30% lived in cities worldwide • Cities doubling in size in just 20 years

  36. Urbanization • Timeline (continued) • Today: 50% live in cities worldwide • Highest growth rates are now in the developing world • By 2025: 86% of the population will live in cities

  37. Urbanization Growth of urban population relative to growth of world population, 1800 - 2000

  38. Urbanization Largest Urban Agglomerations, 1950, 2000, 2015

  39. Urbanization • ..Let’s go back to the Industrial Revolution.. • In the present day developed world, the rural-urban shift took place in a gradual way • Industrialization and increased agriculture efficiency worked together with the urbanization process and kept pace simultaneously • In the developing world…it is now a different story • Urbanization has occurred rapidly and serious problems are arising • The growth of cities has arisen not totally from migration but from the natural increase in population • As opposed to the developed world, urban growth is occurring without a strong industrial base

  40. Urbanization • The need for factory labour is not great and the rural population is constantly increasing • This negates advances in agricultural efficiency • Also a tendency for a primate city – all resources (financial and technological) chanelled into 1 main city • Which equates to…… • Massive, overpopulated cities that cannot support the population

  41. Urbanization • 180,000 people move into cities each day. • 60 million people move into cities each year in developing countries. • And thus the growth of the MegaCity = over 10 million people • In 1996 the world had 12 MegaCities • In 2002, the world jumped to….. • 25 MegaCities • In 2005, over ½ the world’s population was living in MegaCities of over 10 million people • It is expected that their will be 33 MegaCities by 2015 – 21 of which will be located….?? • In Asia

  42. Urbanization • 1950 • New York 12.3 million • London 9 million • Tokyo 7 million • Paris 5 million • 2015 • Tokyo 29 million • Mumbai 27 million • Shanghai 23 million • Beijing 19 million

  43. POSITIVE ASPECTS Economic Activity Proximity to goods and services Health care Entertainment NEGATIVE ASPECTS Crime Land use problems – destruction of wetlands Congestion, Overpopulation Pollution: air, water, noise Squatter settlements Sprawl Urbanization

  44. Urbanization • Positive Consequences • Economic • More specialized goods and services readily available • Educated labour force • Financial services • Accumulation of capital • Emergency Services • Available more quickly • Infrastructure • Easier (and cheaper!) to provide water, sewer, waste services • Education

  45. Urbanization • Negative Consequences • Housing • 100 million people worldwide are homeless and up to a billion may be living in inadequate housing • Health • the urban poor are at greater risk than anyone else in the world – infections and diseases spread rapidly in cities • Pollution • air pollution from cars, cooking, heating, and industry can be deadly; solid waste piling up; noise pollution; …. • Safety and Crime • urban violence is not the monopoly of any single region: it has increased all over the world over the past two decades

  46. Urbanization • Counter-Urbanization – Developed Nations • Government decentralization • Desire to live in the country • Security, health, “community” • “Back to Nature” (and away from technology) • Telecommuting • Mobility of goods (higher order goods are more readily accessible) • Cheaper land, houses

  47. Urbanization • Types of people living in rural areas • Newcomers - retain ties to urban core, younger, well educated, well off, managers/professionals • Homecomers - young families returning to provide rural upbringing to children • Ruralites - never lived in urban core

  48. Urbanization • Urbanization

  49. Urbanization • City Profiles • Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast) • Mumbai (Bombay), India • Jakarta, Indonesia • Paris, France • Toronto, Canada • Tokyo, Japan • Tehran, Iran

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