Difference between revisions of "Human migration" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Sociology]]
 
[[Category:Sociology]]
  
[[Image:Net migration rate world.PNG|right|300px|thumb|[[Net migration rate]]s for 2006: positive (blue), negative (orange) and stable (green).]]
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[[File:Human migrations and mitochondrial haplogroups.PNG|400px|right|thumb|Hypothesized map of human migration based on [[Mitochondrial DNA]]]]
'''Human migration''' denotes any movement by [[human]]s from one locality to another, often over long distances or in large groups. Humans are known to have migrated extensively throughout history and prehistory.  
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'''Human migration''' denotes any movement by [[human being]]s from one locality to another, often over long distances or in large groups. Humans are known to have migrated extensively throughout [[prehistory]] and human history. The movement of populations in modern times has continued under the form of both voluntary migration within one's region, country, or beyond, and [[forced migration|involuntary migration]] (which includes [[trafficking in human beings]]/[[slave trade]] and [[ethnic cleansing]]). The people who migrate are called [[migrant]]s, or, more specifically, [[emigrant]]s, [[immigrant]]s, or [[settler]]s, depending on historical setting, circumstance, and perspective.
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{{toc}}
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Human migrations, initiated for whatever reason, have affected the grand epochs in history, changing forever the demographic landscape of lands throughout the world, bringing, on some occasions, innovation and mutual benefits, and on others destruction and suffering. While [[social science|social scientists]] and historians look for external causes for these happenings, including [[climate change]] and political or religious oppression, [[religion|religious]] scholars and people of faith regard many such events as the playing out of [[God]]'s providence, bringing humankind ever closer to a time when human beings fill the earth and live as one family in peace and harmony.
  
Migration and population isolation is one of the four evolutionary forces (along with [[natural selection]], [[genetic drift]], and [[mutation]]). The study of the distribution of and change in [[allele]] (gene variations) frequencies under such influences is the discipline of [[Population genetics]].
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==Types of migrations==
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Migrations can be domestic or international. In domestic migration people move within their homeland, be it from one town to the next or across the country. This may take the form of moving from one level of density to another such as rural to urban (or vice versa).
  
The movement of populations in '''modern''' times has continued under the form of both voluntary migration within one's region, country, or beyond, and [[forced migration|involuntary migration]] (which includes [[slave trade]], [[Trafficking in human beings]] and [[ethnic cleansing]]).  The people who migrate are called '''[[migrants]]''', or, more specifically, [[emigrants]], [[immigrants]] or [[settler]]s, depending on historical setting, circumstance and perspective.
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International migration involves crossing international borders. International migration can occur over relatively short distances such as that in between the member states of the [[European Union]] or can involve moves to entirely different continents such as from [[Asia]] to [[Africa]].  
  
==Overview==
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Migration is generally considered a permanent action, although some people migrate to other places for rather long periods of time (months or years)  rather than permanently.
  
There is only one evolutionary mechanism: this mechanism is 'selection' both in natural form and in un-natural form(i.e. breeding by cultural (human) intervention); selection acts on physical structures both at the gene level (indirectly) and at the cultural (see memes)level (directly); all other phenomena, such as population isolation, are results of the selection mechanisms at work, they are not evolutionary forces.
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=== Voluntary and forced migration ===
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Migration is usually divided into '''voluntary migration''' and '''involuntary''' or '''forced migration'''.
  
Different types of migration include:
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'''Voluntary migration''' is based on the initiative and the free will of the person and is influenced by a combination of factors: economic, political, and social: either in the migrants` country of origin (determinant factors or "push factors") or in the country of destination (attraction factors or "pull factors"). "Push" factors are the negative aspects (for example wars) of the country of origin, often decisive in people's choice to emigrate. The "pull" factors are the positive aspects of a different country that encourages people to emigrate to seek a better life.
  
*Daily human [[commuting]].
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'''Forced migration'''
*[[Seasonal human migration]] is mainly related to agriculture.
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Forced migration is:
*Permanent migration, for the purposes of permanent or long-term stays.
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<blockquote>a general term that refers to the movements of refugees and internally displaced people (those displaced by conflicts within their country of origin) as well as people displaced by natural or environmental disasters, chemical or nuclear disasters, famine, or development projects.<ref>[http://www.columbia.edu/itc/hs/pubhealth/modules/forcedMigration/definitions.html What is Forced Migration?] ''The Harriet and Robert Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health''. Retrieved December 22, 2022.</ref></blockquote>
*Local
 
*Regional
 
*Rural to Urban, more common in developing countries as industrialization takes effect
 
*Urban to Rural, more common in developed countries due to a higher cost of urban living
 
*[[International migration]]
 
  
Human migration has taken place at all times and in the greatest variety of circumstances. It has been tribal, national, class and individual. Its causes have been climatic, political, economic, religious, or more love of adventure. Its causes and results are fundamental for the study of [[ethnology]], of political and social history, and of political economy.
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These different causes of migration leave people with only one choice, to move to a new environment. Immigrants leave their beloved homes to seek a life in camps, spontaneous settlement, and countries of asylum.<ref>Elizabeth Colson, [http://web.mnstate.edu/robertsb/308/forced%20migration%20and%20the%20anthropological%20response.pdf Forced Migration and the Anthropological Response] ''Journal of Refugee Studies'' 16(1) (2003): 1–19. Retrieved December 22, 2022.</ref> To these reasons can be added [[human trafficking]], in which people are sold into [[slavery]], usually far from their country of origin.
  
The pressures of human migrations, whether as outright conquest or by slow cultural infiltration and resettlement, have affected the grand epochs in history (e.g. the [[fall of the Western Roman Empire]]); under the form of [[colonization]], migration has transformed the world (e.g. the prehistoric and historic settlements of Australia and the Americas). [[Population genetics]] studied in traditionally settled modern populations have opened a window into the historical patterns of migrations, a technique pioneered by [[Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza]].
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[[File:Niger highway overloaded camion 2007.jpg|thumb|400px|Niger highway overloaded truck 2007]]
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Depending on the goal and reason for relocation, people who migrate can be divided into three categories: migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers. Each category is defined broadly as the mixed circumstances that motivate a person to change their location.
  
[[Image:Human mtDNA migration.png|300px|right|thumb|[[mtDNA]]-based chart of large human migrations.]]
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'''Migrants''' are traditionally described as persons who change the country of their residence for general reasons and purposes. These purposes may include the search for better job opportunities or [[healthcare]] needs. This term is the most generally defined one as anyone changing their geographic location permanently can be considered a migrant.<ref name=Blackwood> Mark Blackwood, [https://thewordpoint.com/blog/migration-vs-immigration Migration vs. Immigration: Understanding the Nuances] ''The Word Point'', August 27, 2020. Retrieved December 22, 2022.</ref>
Forced migration (see [[population transfer]]) has been a means of social control under authoritarian regimes, yet under free initiative migration is a powerful factor in social adjustment (e.g. the growth of urban populations).
 
<!It must suffice here to indicate the extent and character of the principal movements in the past, and then describe certain aspects of modern migration, with some links to other Wikipedia topics.>
 
  
In December 2003 The Global Commission on International Migration (GCIM) was launched with the support of [[Kofi Annan]] and several countries, with an independent 19-member Commission, threefold mandate and a finite life-span, ending December 2005. Its report, based on regional consultation meetings with stakeholders and scientific reports from leading international migration experts, was published and presented to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan on 5 October 2005. The 90-page Report, along with supporting evidence, is available on the GCIM website [http://www.gcim.org]
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[[Refugee]]s, by contrast are persons who do not willingly relocate. The reasons for the refugees' migration usually involve war actions within the country or other forms of oppression, coming either from the government or non-governmental sources.  
  
==Push and Pull Factors==
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[[Asylum]] seekers are persons who also leave their country unwillingly, yet, who also do not do so under oppressing circumstances such as war or death threats. The motivation to leave the country for asylum seekers might involve an unstable economic or political situation or high rates of [[crime]]. Thus, asylum seekers relocate predominantly to escape the degradation of the [[Quality of life|quality of their lives]].<ref name=Blackwood/>
  
Push and Pull factors are those factors which either forcefully push someone into migration or attract them. A push factor is a forceful factor, and a factor which relates to the country the person is migrating from. It is generally a problem which the results in people wanting to migrate. Different types of Push Factors can be seen further below.
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[[Nomad]]ic movements usually are not regarded as migrations, as the movement is generally seasonal, there is no intention to settle in the new place, and only a few people have retained this form of lifestyle in modern times. Temporary movement for travel, [[tourism]], or [[pilgrimage]]s is also not regarded as migration, in the absence of an intention to live and settle in the visited places.
A pull factor is something concerning the country a person migrates to. It is generally a good thing that attracts people to a certain place. Push and Pull factors are usually considered as north and south poles on a magnet. The idea is to have the attraction in the middle, i.e the place.  
 
  
'''Push Factors'''
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==History==
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[[Image:Map-of-human-migrations.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Map of early human migrations according to [[Mitochondrial DNA|mitochondrial]] [[population genetics]] (numbers are [[millennia]] before present).]]
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Human migration has taken place at all times and in the greatest variety of circumstances. They have involved [[tribe|tribal]], [[nation|national]], [[social class|class]], and individual levels. Causes have been [[climate|climatic]], [[politics|political]], [[economics|economic]], [[religion|religious]], or simply for love of adventure. Its causes and results are fundamental for the study of [[ethnology]], of political and social history, and of political economy.
  
*Poor Medical Care.
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The pressures of human migrations, whether as outright conquest or by slow cultural infiltration and resettlement, have affected the grand epochs in history, such as the fall of the Western Roman Empire; under the form of [[colonization]], migration has transformed the world, as for example in the settlements of [[Australia]] and the [[Americas]].
*Not enough jobs.
 
*Few opportunities.
 
*Primitive Conditions
 
*Political fear
 
*Fear of torture and mistreatment
 
*Not being able to practice religion
 
*Loss of wealth
 
*Natural Disasters
 
  
'''Pull Factors'''
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===Early migrations===
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Historical migration of human populations began with the movement of  ''[[Homo erectus]]'' out of [[Africa]] across [[Eurasia]] about a million years ago. ''[[Homo sapiens]]'' appears to have colonized all of Africa about 150 millennia ago, moved out of Africa some 80 millennia ago, and spread across Eurasia and to Australia before 40 millennia ago. Migration to the Americas took place about 20 to 15 millennia ago, and by two millennia ago, most of the [[Pacific Islands]] were colonized. Later population movements notably include the [[Neolithic revolution]], [[Indo-European expansion]], and the Early Medieval [[Great Migrations]] including [[Turkic expansion]]. The [[Age of Exploration]] and European [[Colonialism]] led to an accelerated pace of migration since Early Modern times.
  
*Chances of getting a job
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===Indo-Europeans===
*Better living standards
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[[Image:IE expansion.png|400px|thumb|Scheme of Indo-European migrations from c. 4000 to 1000 B.C.E. according to the [[Kurgan hypothesis]]. The purple area corresponds to the assumed ''[[Urheimat]]'' ([[Samara culture]], [[Sredny Stog culture]]). The red area corresponds to the area which may have been settled by Indo-European-speaking peoples up to ca. 2500 B.C.E.; the orange area to 1000 B.C.E.]]
*Enjoyment
 
*Education
 
*Better Medical Care
 
*Security
 
*Family Links
 
  
==Pre-modern migrations==
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The Indo-European migration had variously been dated to the end of the [[Neolithic]] ([[Marija Gimbutas]]: [[Corded ware]], [[Yamna]], [[Kurgan]]), the early Neolithic ([[Colin Renfrew]], 1987: [[Starcevo-Körös|Starčevo-Körös]], [[Linearbandkeramic]]) and the late [[Palaeolithic]] ([[Marcel Otte]] 1996, [[Paleolithic Continuity Theory]]).
{{main|Historical migration}}
 
Historical migration of human populations begins with the movement of  ''[[Homo erectus]]'' out of [[Africa]] across [[Eurasia]] about a million years ago. ''[[Homo sapiens]]'' appears to have colonised all of Africa about 150 millennia ago, moved out of Africa some 80 millennia ago, and spread across Eurasia and to Australia before 40 millennia ago. [[Models of migration to the New World|Migration to the Americas]] took place about 20 to 15 millennia ago, and by 2 millennia ago, most of the [[Pacific Islands]] were colonised. Later population movements notably include the [[Neolithic revolution]], [[Indo-European expansion]], and the Early Medieval [[Great Migrations]] including [[Turkic expansion]]. The [[Age of Exploration]] and European [[Colonialism]] led to an accelerated pace of migration since Early Modern times.
 
  
==Modern migrations==
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The speakers of the [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] language are usually believed to have originated to the North of the [[Black Sea]] (today Eastern [[Ukraine]] and Southern [[Russia]]), and from there they gradually migrated into, and spread their language to, [[Anatolia]], [[Europe]], and [[Central Asia]] [[Iran]] and [[South Asia]] starting from around the end of the Neolithic period. Other theories, such as that of [[Colin Renfrew]], posit their development much earlier, in Anatolia, and claim that Indo-European languages and culture spread as a result of the agricultural revolution in the early Neolithic.
===Industrialization===
 
  
While the pace of migration had accelerated since the 18th century already (including the involuntary slave trade), it would increase further in the 19th century. Manning distinguishes three major types of migration: labour migration, refugee migrations and lastly: [[urbanization]]. Millions of agricultural workers left the countryside and moved to the cities causing unprecedented levels of urbanization. This phenomenon began in Britain in the late 18th century and spread around the world and continues to this day in many areas.
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Relatively little is known about the inhabitants of pre-Indo-European "[[Old European culture|Old Europe]]." They are believed to have been [[hunter-gatherer]]s. The [[Basque language]] remains from that era, as do the indigenous [[Caucasian languages|languages]] of the [[Caucasus]]. The [[Sami]] are genetically distinct among the peoples of Europe, but the [[Sami languages]], as part of the [[Finno-Ugric languages]], spread into Europe about the same time as the Indo-European languages. However, since that period speakers of other Finno-Ugric languages such as [[Finnish people|the Finns]] and [[Estonian people|the Estonians]] have had more contact with other Europeans, thus today sharing more genes with them than the Sami.
  
Industrialization encouraged migration wherever it appeared. The increasingly global economy globalised the labour market. [[Atlantic slave trade]] diminished sharply after 1820, which gave rise to self-bound [[indentured labour|contract labour]] migration from Europe and Asia to plantations. Also overpopulation, open agricultural frontiers and rising industrial centres attracted voluntary, encouraged and sometimes coerced migration. Moreover, migration was significantly eased by improved transportation techniques.
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===Bronze Age===
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The earliest migrations we can reconstruct from historical sources are those of the second millennium B.C.E. It is speculated that the [[Proto-Indo-Iranians]] began their expansion from ca. 2000 B.C.E., the [[Indo-Aryan migration]] hypothesis suggests that they reached Assyria in the west and the Punjab in the east by ca. 1500 B.C.E.<ref>Edwin Bryant, ''The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate'' (Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0195137779).</ref> In the [[Late Bronze Age]], the [[Aegean Sea|Aegean]] and [[Anatolia]] were overrun by moving populations, summarized as the "[[Sea Peoples]]," leading to the collapse of the [[Hittite Empire]] and ushering in the [[Iron Age]].
  
Between 1846 and 1940 [[mass migrations]] occurred world wide. The size and speed of transnational migratory movements were unprecedented. Some 55 millions of migrants moved from Europe to America, and an additional 2,5 million moved from Asia to America. Of this [[transatlantic migrations]], 65% went to the United States. Other major receiving countries were Argentina, Canada, Brazil and Cuba. (see also [[Immigration to the United States]], [[Italian diaspora]], [[Irish diaspora]] etc.)
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[[Image:Bantu_expansion.png|thumb|300px|right|One common hypothesis of the Bantu expansion]]
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The [[Bantu]] first originated around the [[Benue River|Benue]]-[[Cross River|Cross]] rivers area in southeastern [[Nigeria]] and spread over [[Africa]] to the [[Zambia]] area. Sometime in the second millennium B.C.E..E., perhaps triggered by the drying of the [[Sahara]] and pressure from the migration of people from the Sahara into the region, they were forced to expand into the [[rainforest]]s of central Africa (phase I). In the first millennium B.C.E.., they began a more rapid second phase of expansion beyond the forests into southern and eastern Africa, and again in the first millennium C.E. as new agricultural techniques and plants were developed in Zambia. By about 1000 C.E.. it had reached modern day [[Zimbabwe]] and [[South Africa]].
  
During this same period similar large numbers of people migrated over large distances within Asia. Southeastern Asia received 50 million migrants, mainly from India and south China. North Asia, that be [[Manchuria]], Siberia, Central Asia and Japan together, received another 50 million. A movement that started in the 1890s with migrants from China, Russia and Korea, and was especially large due to coerced migration from the Soviet Union and Japan in the 1930s. Less is known about exact numbers of the migrations from and within Africa in this period, but Africa experienced a small nett immigration between 1850 and 1950, from a variety of origins.  
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===Early Iron Age===
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The [[Dorian invasion]] of Greece led to the [[Greek Dark Ages]]. Very little is known about the period of the twelfth to ninth centuries B.C.E.., but there were significant population movements throughout Anatolia and the Iranian plateau. [[Iranian peoples]] invaded the territory of modern [[Iran]] in this period, taking over the [[Elamite Empire]]. The [[Urartians]] were displaced by [[Armenians]], and the [[Cimmerians]] and the [[Mushki]] migrated from the Caucasus into Anatolia. A [[Thraco-Cimmerian]] connection links these movements to the [[Proto-Celtic]] world of central Europe, leading to the introduction of Iron to Europe and the [[Celt]]ic expansion to western Europe and the British Isles around 500 B.C.E.
  
Transnational labour migration reached a peak of three million migrants per year in the early twentieth century. Italy, Norway, Ireland and the Quongdong region of China were regions with especially high emigration rates during these years. These large migration flows influenced the process of nation state formation in many ways. [[List of United States immigration legislation|Immigration restrictions]] have been developed, as well as [[diaspora]] cultures and myths that reflect the importance of migration to the foundation of certain nations, like the American [[melting pot]]. The transnational labour migration fell to a lower level from 1930s to the 1960s and then rebounded.
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===The great migrations===
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[[Image:Karte völkerwanderung.jpg|thumb|400px|Second to fifth century migrations.]]
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Western historians refer to the period of migrations that separated [[Classical antiquity|Antiquity]] from the [[Middle Ages]] in [[Europe]] as the Great Migrations or as the [[Migrations Period]]. This period is further divided into two phases.
  
The twentieth century experienced also an increase in migratory flows caused by war and politics.  Muslims moved from the Balkan to Turkey, while Christians moved the other way, during the collapse of the [[Ottoman Empire]]. 400.000 Jews moved to Palestine in the early twentieth century. The [[Russian Civil War]] caused some 3 million Russians, Poles and Germans to migrate out of the Soviet Union. World War II and [[decolonization]] also caused migrations, see below.
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The first phase, from 300 to 500 C.E., saw the movement of [[Germanic tribes|Germanic]] and other tribes and ended with the settlement of these peoples in the areas of the former Western [[Roman Empire]], essentially causing its demise.  
  
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The second phase, between 500 and 900 C.E., saw [[Slavic peoples|Slavic]], [[Turkic people|Turkic]] and other tribes on the move, re-settling in Eastern Europe and gradually making it predominantly Slavic. Moreover, more Germanic tribes migrated within Europe during this period, including the  [[Lombards]] (to [[Italy]]), and the  [[Angles]], [[Saxons]], and [[Jutes]] (to the [[British Isles]]). The last phase of the migrations saw the coming of the [[Magyars|Hungarians]] to the [[Great Hungarian Plain|Pannonian plain]].
  
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German historians of the nineteenth century referred to these Germanic migrations as the ''Völkerwanderung,'' the migrations of the peoples.
  
====World War II====
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The European migration period is connected with the simultaneous [[Turkic expansion]] which at first displaced other peoples towards the west, and by High Medieval times, the [[Seljuk Turks]] themselves reached the Mediterranean.
See [[World War II evacuation and expulsion]] for World War II forced migrations.
 
  
The [[Jewish diaspora]] across Europe, the Mediterranean and the Middle East formed from voluntary migrations, enslavement, threats of enslavement and [[pogrom]]s. After the Nazis brought the [[Holocaust]] upon Jewish people in the 1940s, there was increased migration to the [[British Mandate of Palestine]], which became the modern day state of [[Israel]] as a result of the [[1947 UN Partition Plan]].
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===Medieval and early modern Europe===
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The medieval period, although often presented as a time of limited human mobility and slow social change in the history of Europe, in fact saw widespread movement of peoples. The [[Viking]]s from [[Scandinavia]] raided all over Europe from the eighth century and settled in many places, including [[Normandy]], the north of [[England]], [[Scotland]], and [[Ireland]] (most of whose urban centers were founded by the Vikings). The Normans later conquered the Saxon Kingdom of England, most of Ireland, southern Italy and [[Sicily]]—although the migration associated with these conquests was relatively limited—the Normans in most cases forming only a small ruling class. Iberia was invaded by [[Muslim]] [[Arab]]s, [[Berber]]s, and [[Moors]] in the eighth century, founding new Kingdoms such as [[al Andalus]] and bringing with them a wave of settlers from North Africa.  
  
Provisions of the [[Potsdam Agreement]] from 1945 signed by victorious [[Western Allies]] and the [[Soviet Union]] led to one of the largest European migrations, and definitely the largest in the [[20th century]]. It involved the migration and resettlement of close to or over 20 million people. The largest affected group were [[Expulsion of Germans after World War II|16.5 million Germans expelled from Eastern Europe westwards]]. The second largest group were Poles, [[Expulsion of Poles after World War II|millions of whom were expelled]] westwards from eastern [[Kresy]] region and resettled in the so-called [[Recovered Territories]] (see [[Oder-Neisse line#Allies decide Polish border|Allies decide Polish border]] in the article on the [[Oder-Neisse line]]). Hundreds of thousands of Poles, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians and some Belarusians, were in the meantime expelled eastwards from Europe to the Soviet Union. Finally, many of the several hundred thousand Jews remaining in the Eastern Europe after the [[Holocaust]] [[Berihah|migrated outside Europe]] to [[Israel]].
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In the other direction, European [[Christian]] armies conquered [[Palestine]] for a time during the [[Crusades]] in the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, founding three Christian kingdoms and settling them with Christian Knights and their families. This permanent migration was relatively small however and was one of the reasons why the Crusaders eventually lost their hold on the Holy Lands.  
  
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In the fourteenth century, German military colonists settled the [[Baltic region|Baltic]] region, becoming a ruling elite. At the end of the Middle Ages, the [[Roma]] arrived in Europe (to [[Iberian Peninsula|Iberia]] and the [[Balkans]]) from the Middle East, originating from the [[Indus river]].
  
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Internal European migration stepped up in the Early Modern Period. In this period, major migration within Europe included the recruiting by monarchs of landless laborers to settle depopulated or uncultivated regions and a series of forced migration caused by religious persecution. Notable examples of this phenomenon include mass migration of Protestants from the [[Spanish Netherlands]] to the [[Dutch Republic]] after the 1580s, the expelling of [[Jews]] and [[Moriscos]] from [[Spain]] in the 1590s, and the expulsion of the [[Huguenots]] from [[France]] in the 1680s.
  
====Contemporary migration====
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Since the fourteenth century, the [[Serbs]] started leaving the areas of their medieval Kingdom and Empire that was overrun by the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] Turks and migrated to the north, to the lands of today's [[Vojvodina]] (northern Serbia), which was ruled by the [[Kingdom of Hungary]] at that time. The [[Habsburg]] monarchs of Austria encouraged them to settle on their frontier with the Turks and provide military service by granting them free land and religious toleration. The two greatest [[Great Serbian Migrations|migrations]] took place in 1690 and 1737. Other instances of labor recruitments include the [[Plantations of Ireland]] - the settling of Ireland with Protestant English colonists in the period 1560-1690 and the recruitment of [[Volga Germans|German]]s by [[Catherine the Great]] of Russia to settle the [[Volga]] region in the eighteenth century.
{{see|immigration|forced migration|refugees}}
 
[[Image:Net migration rate world.PNG|right|300px|thumb|[[Net migration rate]]s for 2006: positive (blue) and negative (orange)]]
 
  
Target countries with currently high [[immigration]] rates are [[North America]], [[Western Europe]], [[Central Europe]], [[Southern Europe]], [[Australia]]. Due to [[Refugee#Refugee movements in Africa|refugee movements within Africa]], there are African countries with high positive as well as negative migration rates. [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2112.html]
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European [[Colonialism]] from the sixteenth to the early twentieth centuries led to an imposition of European [[colonies]] in many regions of the world, particularly in the [[Americas]], [[South Asia]], [[Sub-Saharan Africa]], and [[Australia]], where European languages remain either prevalent or in frequent use as administrative languages. Major human migration before the eighteenth century was largely state directed. For instance, Spanish emigration to the New World was limited to settlers from [[Crown of Castile|Castile]] who were intended to acts as soldiers or administrators. Mass immigration was not encouraged due to a labor shortage in Europe (of which Spain was the worst affected by a depopulation of its core territories in the seventeenth century). Europeans also tended to die of tropical diseases in the New World in this period and for this reason, England, France, and Spain preferred using [[slaves]] to free labor in their American possessions.  
<!--countries with less than 5 million total population are listed below—>
 
*[[Bosnia and Herzegovina]]: 1.3% per year
 
*[[Burundi]]: 0.8%
 
*[[Jordan]]: 0.63%
 
*[[Canada]]: 0.58%
 
*[[Ireland]]: 0.48%
 
*[[Australia]]: 0.38%
 
*[[New Zealand]]: 0.36%
 
*[[Angola]]: 0.35%
 
*[[Portugal]]: 0.34%
 
*[[USA]]: 0.32%
 
*[[Switzerland]]: 0.31%
 
*[[Netherlands]]: 0.27%
 
*[[Denmark]]: 0.25%
 
*[[Belarus]]: 0.23%
 
*[[Greece]]: 0.23%
 
*[[Germany]]<ref>[http://www.zuwanderung.de/english/migration_to_germany.html Immigration to Germany – A Decade in Review] Federal Ministry of the Interior, Germany</ref>: 0.22%
 
*[[United Kingdom]]: 0.22%
 
*[[Italy]]: 0.2%
 
  
Countries of origin with high emigration rates are in [[Africa]],  [[Eastern Europe]],  [[Central Asia]], [[South America|South]] and [[Central America]]:
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This changed in the eighteenth century due to population increases in Europe. Spanish restrictions on emigration to Latin America were revoked and the English colonies in North America saw a major influx of settlers attracted by cheap or free land, economic opportunity, and religious toleration. By 1800, European emigration had transformed the demographic character of the American continent. Their influence elsewhere was less pronounced as in South Asia and Africa, European settlement in this period was limited to thin layer of administrators, traders, and soldiers.
*-0.6%: [[Mali]]
 
*-0.5%: [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Albania]], [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]];
 
*-0.4%: [[Armenia]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Azerbaijan]], [[Mexico]], [[Republic of Congo]], [[El Salvador]], [[Estonia]];
 
*-0.3%: [[Ecuador]], [[Kazakhstan]], [[Tanzania]]
 
*-0.2%: [[Kyrgyzstan]], [[Latvia]], [[Tajikistan]], [[Guatemala]]
 
  
Small countries like island states can have extremely high migration rates that fluctuate over short times due to their low overall population: [[Micronesia]] -2% per year, [[Grenada]] -1.6%, [[Samoa]] -1.2%, [[Dominica]] -0.93%, [[Suriname]] and [[Virgin Islands]] -0.87%, [[Greenland]] -0.83%, [[Guyana]] and [[Saint Vincent and the Grenadines]] -0.75%; [[Liberia]] 2.7%, [[Kuwait]] 1.6%, [[Turks and Caicos Islands]] 1.1%, [[San Marino]] 1.1%.
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===Industrialization===
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While the pace of migration had accelerated since the eighteenth century (including the involuntary [[slave trade]]), it would increase further in the nineteenth century. Manning distinguished three major types of migration: [[labor]] migration, [[refugee]] migrations, and lastly [[urbanization]].<ref>Patrick Manning, ''Migration in World History'' (Routledge, 2005, ISBN 0415311470).</ref> Millions of agricultural workers left the countryside and moved to the cities causing unprecedented levels of urbanization. This phenomenon began in Britain in the late eighteenth century and spread around the world, continuing to this day in many areas.
  
For more data on contemporary migration see:
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[[Industrialization]] encouraged migration wherever it appeared. The increasingly global economy [[globalization|globalized]] the labor market. The Atlantic slave trade diminished sharply after 1820, which gave rise to self-bound [[indentured labor|contract labor]] migration from Europe and Asia to plantations. Also overpopulation, open agricultural frontiers, and rising industrial centers attracted voluntary, encouraged and sometimes coerced migration. Moreover, migration was significantly eased by improved [[transportation]] techniques.
*[http://www.swivel.com/data_sets/show/1004869 Net Human Migration Rate]
 
*[http://www.oecd.org/statisticsdata/0,3381,en_2649_37415_1_119656_1_1_37415,00.html OECD International Migration Data 2006]
 
  
==Migrations and climate cycles==
+
===Twentieth century===
The modern field of climate history suggests that the successive waves of Eurasian nomadic movement throughout history have had their origins in [[Climate change|climatic cycles]], which have expanded or contracted pastureland in Central Asia, especially [[Mongolia]] and the Altai. People were displaced from their home ground by other tribes trying to find land that could be grazed by essential flocks, each group pushing the next further to the south and west, into the highlands of [[Anatolia]], the [[Pannonian plain|plains of Hungary]], into [[Mesopotamia]] or southwards, into the rich pastures of [[China]].
+
[[Image:Net Migration Rate.PNG|right|400px|thumb|[[Net migration rate]]s January 2017: positive (blue) and negative (orange)]]
 +
Between 1846 and 1940, [[mass migrations]] occurred world wide. The size and speed of transnational migratory movements became unprecedented. Some 55 millions of migrants moved from Europe to America, and an additional 2.5 million moved from Asia to America. Of this [[transatlantic migrations]], 65 percent went to the [[United States]]. Other major receiving countries were [[Argentina]], [[Canada]], [[Brazil]], and [[Cuba]].  
  
==Toward an understanding of migration==
+
During this same period similar large numbers of people migrated over large distances within Asia. [[Southeastern Asia]] received 50 million migrants, mainly from [[India]] and south [[China]]. [[North Asia]]—[[Manchuria]], [[Siberia]], [[Central Asia]], and [[Japan]] together—received another 50 million. Less is known about exact numbers of the migrations from and within Africa in this period, but Africa experienced a small net immigration between 1850 and 1950, from a variety of origins.  
===Types of migrations===
 
* The '''cyclic movement''' which involves commuting, a seasonal movement, and [[nomad]]ism.
 
* The '''periodic movement''' which consists of [[migrant labor]], military services, and pastoral farming [[Transhumance]].
 
* The '''migratory movement''' that moves from the eastern part of the United States to the western part.  It also moves from China to southeast Asia, from Europe to North America, and from South America to the middle part of the Americas.
 
* Internal migration
 
  
===Ravenstein's 'laws of migration' ===
+
Transnational labor migration reached a peak of three million migrants per year in the early twentieth century. Italy, Norway, Ireland, and the Quongdong region of China were regions with especially high emigration rates during these years. These large migration flows influenced the process of nation state formation in many ways. Immigration restrictions have been developed, as well as [[diaspora]] cultures and myths that reflect the importance of migration to the foundation of certain nations, like the American [[melting pot]]. The transnational labor migration fell to a lower level from the 1930s to the 1960s and then rebounded.
Certain laws of [[social science]] have been proposed to describe human migration.  The following was a standard list after [[Ravenstein]]'s proposals during the time frame of 1834 to 1913. The laws are as follows:<br />
 
1) ''Most migrants travel short distances and with increasing distance the numbers of migrants decrease.'' This law is based upon the assumptions that the higher travel costs and a lack of knowledge of more distant places acts against large volumes of migration.<br />
 
2) ''Migration occurs in stages and with a wave-like motion.'' Based on his observations in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries that migration occurred in steps with people gradually moving up the settlement hierarchy - from rural areas to villages, to towns, to cities and finally the capital city.<br />
 
3) ''Migration increases in volume as industries and commerce develop and transport improves, and the major direction of movement is from agricultural areas to centres of industry and commerce.''<br />
 
4) ''Most Migrants are adult. Families rarely migrate out of their country of birth.''<br />
 
5) ''Women are more migratory than men within their country of birth but men more frequently venture beyond it.''<br />
 
6) Urban dwellers are less likely to move than their rural counterparts.
 
  
===Other migration models===
+
The twentieth century also experienced an increase in migratory flows caused by [[war]] and [[politics]], with large numbers of [[refugee]]s feeling their homelands that had been taken over by factions hostile to their [[ethnicity]] or [[religion]]. [[Muslim]]s moved from the [[Balkans]] to [[Turkey]], while Christians moved the other way, during the collapse of the [[Ottoman Empire]]. 400,000 Jews moved to Palestine in the early twentieth century. The [[Russian Civil War]] caused some 3 million Russians, Poles, and Germans to migrate out of the Soviet Union. [[World War II]] and [[decolonization]] also caused migrations.
  
*Zipf's [[Inverse distance law]] (1946)
+
===Twenty-first century===
*[[Gravity model]] and the [[Friction of distance]]
+
Migrations continue in the twenty-first century, both voluntary and involuntary.
*[[Buffer Theory]]
 
*Stouffer's [[Theory of intervening opportunities]] (1940)
 
*Lee's [[Push-pull theory]] (1966)
 
*Zelinsky's Mobility Transition Model (1971)
 
*Bauder's [[Regulation]] of [[labor markets]] (2006) "suggests that the international migration of workers is necessary for the survival of industrialized economies...[It] turns the conventional view of international migration on its head: it investigates how migration regulates labor markets, rather than labor markets shaping migration flows." (from the book description)
 
  
===Causes of migrations===
+
In 2015 [[Europe]] experienced a large influx of [[Syria]]n refugees, when 1.3 million people requested asylum.<ref>Melani Barlai, Birte Faehnrich, Christina Griessler, and Markus Rhomberg (eds.), ''The Migrant Crisis: European Perspectives and National Discourses'' (LIT Verlag, 2017, ISBN 978-3643908025).</ref> Europe had already begun registering increased numbers of refugee arrivals in 2010 due to a confluence of conflicts in parts of the [[Middle East]], [[Asia]], and [[Africa]], particularly the wars in Syria, [[Iraq]], and [[Afghanistan]], but also [[terrorist]] insurgencies in [[Nigeria]] and [[Pakistan]], and long-running human rights abuses in [[Eritrea]], all contributing to refugee flows. Many millions initially sought refuge in comparatively stable countries near their origin, but while these countries were largely free of war, living conditions for refugees were often very poor. As it became clear that the wars in their home countries would not end in the foreseeable future, many fled to Europe in hopes of finding permanent homes.
  
Causes of migrations have modified over hundreds of years. Some cases are constant, some of them do not carry the same importance as years ago ''(for example: in 18th and 19th centuries labor migration did not have the same character like today)''.  
+
The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (Global Compact for Migration) was a milestone in migration governance, as the first internationally negotiated statement striking a balance between migrants' rights and the principle of States' sovereignty over their territory. Although not legally binding, the Global Compact for Migration was adopted by consensus in December 2018 at a [[United Nations]] conference in which more than 150 United Nations Member States participated and, formally endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly on December 19, 2018.<ref>[https://news.un.org/en/story/2018/12/1028941 General Assembly officially adopts roadmap for migrants to improve safety, ease suffering] ''United Nations'', December 19, 2018. Retrieved December 23, 2022.</ref>
  
In general we can divide factors causing migrations into two groups of factors: [[Push and pull factors]]. In general:
+
==Causes==
* '''Push Factors''' are economic, political, cultural, and environmentally based.
+
The causes of migration can be seen as a series of push and pull factors—those factors which either forcefully push someone into migration or attract them. Push and pull factors are usually considered as north and south poles on a [[magnet]].  
* '''Pull Factors''' are economic, political, cultural, and environmentally based.
 
* '''Barriers/Obstacles''' which is an example of Nigeria in the 1970s and 1980s.
 
  
Some certain factors are both push and pull like education, industry etc.
+
===Push factors===
 +
A push factor is a forceful factor, and a factor which relates to the country the person is migrating from. It is generally a problem which results in people wanting to leave. Different types of push factors inclued:
 +
*Poor medical care
 +
*Not enough jobs
 +
*Few opportunities
 +
*Primitive conditions
 +
*Political fear
 +
*Fear of torture and mistreatment
 +
*Not being able to practice religion
 +
*Loss of wealth
 +
*Natural disasters (including changes in climate)
  
On the macro level, the causes of migration can be distilled into two main categories: ''security dimension of migration'' (natural disasters, conflicts, threats to individual safety, poor political prospects) and ''economic dimension of migration'' (poor economic situation, poor situation of national market). [AIV document]
+
===Pull factors===
 
+
A pull factor is something concerning the country a person migrates to. It is generally a good thing that attracts people to a certain place.
===Effects of migration===
+
*Chances of getting a job
{{Unreferencedsection|date=June 2007}}
+
*Better living standards
Migration like any other process shapes many fields of life, having both advantages and disadvantages. Effects of migrations are:
+
*Enjoyment
 
+
*Education
*changes in population distribution
+
*Better medical care
*mixing of different cultures and races, what often leads to negative social behaviors – tensions in society between majorities and minorities, followed often by local struggles and [[racial prejudice|racism]] and racial discrimination{{Fact|date=April 2007}}. Also criminality growth can be caused{{Fact|date=April 2007}}. But effects in different societies can be different. It is possible also some positive cultural effects of migration, for example exchange of cultural experience, new knowledge.
+
*Security
*demographic consequences: since migration is selective of particular age groups, migrants are mostly young and in productive age. It can cause a demographic crisis – [[population ageing]], what in turn can be followed by economic problems (shrinking group of economically active population has to finance extending group of inactive population).
+
*Family links
*[[Economic results of migration|economic results]], which are of the greatest importance for the development of the countries.
 
 
 
===Migration in the European Union===
 
 
 
The wages in the European Union are generally higher than the rest of Europe- thus explaining why a large number of [[Eastern Europe]]ans choose to migrate to the EU. However, such migration is becoming increasingly difficult with the EU's ever more stringent immigration laws. Immigrants from the ten mostly Eastern European states admitted to the EU in 2004, however, can freely migrate to [[Great Britain]], [[Ireland]] and [[Sweden]].
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
[[Image:Human mtDNA migration.png|300px|right|thumb|[[mtDNA]]-based chart of large human migrations.]]
 
'''Historical [[human migration|migration of human populations]]''' begins with the movement of  ''[[Homo erectus]]'' out of [[Africa]] across [[Eurasia]] about a million years ago. ''[[Homo sapiens]]'' appears to have colonized all of Africa about 150 millennia ago, moved out of Africa some 80 millennia ago, and spread across Eurasia and to Australia before 40 millennia ago. [[Models of migration to the New World|Migration to the Americas]] took place about 20 to 15 millennia ago, and by 1 millennia ago, all the [[Pacific Islands]] were colonized. Later population movements notably include the [[Neolithic revolution]], [[Indo-European expansion]], and the Early Medieval [[Great Migrations]] including [[Turkic expansion]]. The [[Age of Exploration]] and European [[Colonialism]] led to an accelerated pace of migration since Early Modern times.
 
 
 
==Early migrations==
 
[[Image:Map-of-human-migrations.jpg|thumb|350px|Map of early human migrations according to [[Mitochondrial DNA|mitochondrial]] [[population genetics]] (numbers are [[millennia]] before present).]]
 
 
 
[[Human evolution|Evolution of the genus ''Homo'']] took place in Africa (see [[Recent single-origin hypothesis]]). First ''[[Homo erectus]]'' migrated out of Africa across Eurasia, beginning about one million years ago, no doubt using some of the same available land routes north of the Himalayas that were later to become the [[Silk Road]], and across the [[Strait of Gibraltar]].  Bruce Bower controversially suggested  that ''Homo erectus'' may have built rafts and sailed oceans. [http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20031018/bob8.asp]
 
 
 
The expansion of ''[[Homo erectus]]'' was followed by that of ''[[Homo sapiens]]''. The [[matrilinear]] [[most recent common ancestor]] shared by all living human beings, dubbed [[Mitochondrial Eve]], probably lived roughly 150-120 [[annum|ka]] [[BP]], the time of ''[[Homo sapiens idaltu]]'', probably in the area of modern [[Ethiopia]], [[Kenya]] or [[Tanzania]]. Around 100-80 ka BP, three main lines of ''Homo sapiens sapiens'' diverged, bearers of mitochondrial haplogroup [[Haplogroup L1 (mtDNA)|L1]] (mtDNA) / [[Haplogroup A (Y-DNA)|A]] (Y-DNA) colonizing Southern Africa (the ancestors of the [[Khoisan]] ([[Capoid]]) peoples), bearers of haplogroup [[Haplogroup L2 (mtDNA)|L2]] (mtDNA) / [[Haplogroup B (Y-DNA)|B]] (Y-DNA) settling Central and West Africa (the ancestors of [[Niger-Congo]] and [[Nilo-Saharan]] speaking peoples and of the [[Mbuti]] pygmies), while  the bearers of haplogroup [[Haplogroup L3 (mtDNA)|L3]] remained in East Africa. Some 70 ka BP, a part of the L3 bearers  migrated into the [[Near East]], spreading east to southern [[Asia]] and [[Australasia]] some 60 ka BP, northwestwards into [[Europe]] and eastwards into [[Central Asia]] some 40 ka BP, and further east to [[the Americas]] from ca. 30 ka BP.
 
 
 
==Migrations to the New World==
 
{{main|Models of migration to the New World}}
 
There are two main models for the history of the first settlement of the Americas. One school of thought believes in a "short chronology," believing that the first movement into the New World occurred no earlier than 14,000 – 16,000 years ago. On the other hand, the "long chronology" camp posits that people entered the hemisphere at a much earlier date, theorizing the possibility of migration 20,000 years ago or earlier.
 
 
 
==Neolithic Revolution==
 
{{main|Neolithic Revolution}}
 
[[Image:Neolithic Expansion.gif|thumb|350px|Neolithic expansions from the [[7th millennium B.C.E.|7th]] to the [[5th millennium B.C.E.]]]]
 
[[Agriculture]] is believed to have first been practiced some 10,000 years ago in the [[Fertile Crescent]] (see [[Jericho]]). From there it propagated as a "wave" across Europe, a view supported by [[Archaeogenetics]], reaching northern Europe some 5 [[annum|ka]] [[BP]].
 
 
 
==Pacific==
 
The islands of the Pacific were the last region on Earth to be populated by humans, as recently as 15 to 12 centuries ago.
 
 
 
With the art of open-sea [[navigation]] involving the most confident and courageous use of the available technologies of boat-building, combined with the most sophisticated understanding of currents and prevailing winds, the [[Polynesia]]ns, starting with the [[Lapita]] culture, have proven to be the most successful in the art of navigation, if the permanent spread of culture is taken into account, for the [[Norseman|Norse]] adventurers in the North Atlantic and the Arab traders in the Indian Ocean did not create permanent settlements.  The Lapita people, who got their name from the archaeological site in Lapita, [[New Caledonia]], where their characteristic pottery was first discovered, came from [[Austronesia]], probably New Guinea. Their navigation skills took them to the Solomon Islands, around 1600 B.C.E., and later to Fiji and Tonga. By the beginning of the [[1st millennium B.C.E.]], most of Polynesia was a loose web of thriving cultures who settled on the islands' coasts and lived off the sea. By 500 B.C.E. [[Micronesia]] was completely colonized; the last region of Polynesia to be reached was [[New Zealand]] in around AD 1000.
 
 
 
Polynesian migration patterns also have been studied by [[linguistics|linguistic]] analysis, and recently by analyzing characteristic genetic [[alleles]] of today's inhabitants. Both methods resulted in supporting the original archaeological findings.
 
 
 
==Bantu expansion==
 
{{main|Bantu expansion}}
 
[[Image:Bantu_expansion.png|thumb|200px|right|One common hypothesis of the Bantu expansion]]
 
 
 
The [[Bantu]] first originated around the [[Benue River|Benue]]-[[Cross River|Cross]] rivers area in southeastern Nigeria and spread over Africa to the [[Zambia]] area.  Sometime in the [[2nd millennium B.C.E.|second millennium B.C.E.]], perhaps triggered by the drying of the [[Sahara]] and pressure from the migration of people from the Sahara into the region, they were forced to expand into the [[rainforest]]s of central Africa (phase I).  In the [[1st millennium B.C.E.]], they began a more rapid second phase of expansion beyond the forests into southern and eastern Africa, and again in the [[1st millennium AD]] as new agricultural techniques and plants were developed in Zambia. By about AD 1000 it had reached modern day [[Zimbabwe]] and [[South Africa]]. In Zimbabwe a major southern hemisphere empire was established, with its capital at [[Great Zimbabwe]].  By the 14th or 15th century, the Empire had surpassed its resources and had collapsed.
 
 
 
==Eurasian==
 
===Indo-Europeans===
 
{{seealso|Proto-Indo-Europeans}}
 
[[Image:IE expansion.png|350px|thumb|Scheme of Indo-European migrations from ca. 4000 to 1000 B.C.E. according to the [[Kurgan hypothesis]]. The purple area  corresponds to the assumed ''[[Urheimat]]'' ([[Samara culture]], [[Sredny Stog culture]]). The red area corresponds to the area which may have been settled by Indo-European-speaking peoples up to ca. 2500 B.C.E.; the orange area to 1000 B.C.E.]]
 
 
 
The Indo-European migration had variously been dated to the end of the [[Neolithic]] ([[Marija Gimbutas]]: [[Corded ware]], [[Yamna]], [[Kurgan]]), the early Neolithic ([[Colin Renfrew]]: [[Starcevo-Körös|Starčevo-Körös]], [[Linearbandkeramic]]) and the late [[Palaeolithic]] ([[Marcel Otte]], [[Paleolithic Continuity Theory]]).
 
 
 
The speakers of the [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] language are usually believed to have originated to the North of the [[Black Sea]] (today Eastern [[Ukraine]] and Southern [[Russia]]), and from there they gradually migrated into, and spread their language by cultural diffusion to, [[Anatolia]], [[Europe]], and [[Central Asia]] [[Iran]] and [[South Asia]] starting from around the end of the Neolithic period (see [[Kurgan hypothesis]]). Other theories, such as that of Colin Renfrew, posit their development much earlier, in Anatolia, and claim that Indo-European languages and culture spread as a result of the agricultural revolution in the early Neolithic.
 
 
 
Relatively little is known about the inhabitants of pre-Indo-European "[[Old European culture|Old Europe]]." They are believed to have been hunter-gatherers. The [[Basque language]] remains from that era, as do the indigenous [[Caucasian languages|languages]] of the [[Caucasus]]. The [[Sami people|Sami]] are genetically distinct among the peoples of Europe, but the [[Sami languages]], as part of the [[Finno-Ugric languages]], spread into Europe about the same time as the Indo-European languages. However, since that period speakers of other Finno-Ugric languages such as [[Finnish people|the Finns]] and [[Estonian people|the Estonians]] have had more contact with other Europeans, thus today sharing more genes with them than the Sami.
 
 
 
===Bronze Age===
 
The earliest migrations we can reconstruct from historical sources are those of the 2nd millennium B.C.E. It is speculated that the [[Proto-Indo-Iranians]] began their expansion from ca. 2000 B.C.E., the [[Indo-Aryan migration]] hypothesis suggests that they reached Assyria in the west and the Punjab in the east by ca. 1500 B.C.E.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} In the [[Late Bronze Age]], the [[Aegean Sea|Aegean]] and [[Anatolia]] were overrun by moving populations, summarized as the "[[Sea Peoples]]," leading to the collapse of the [[Hittite Empire]] and ushering in the [[Iron Age]].
 
 
 
===Early Iron Age===
 
The [[Dorian invasion]] of Greece led to the [[Greek Dark Ages]]. Very Little is known about the period of the 12th to 9th centuries B.C.E., but there were significant population movements throughout Anatolia and the Iranian plateau. [[Iranian peoples]] invaded the territory of modern [[Iran]] in this period, taking over the [[Elamite Empire]]. The [[Urartians]] were displaced by [[Armenians]], and the [[Cimmerians]] and the [[Mushki]] migrated from the Caucasus into Anatolia. A [[Thraco-Cimmerian]] connection links these movements to the [[Proto-Celtic]] world of central Europe, leading to the introduction of Iron to Europe and the [[Celt]]ic expansion to western Europe and the British Isles around 500 B.C.E.
 
  
===The great migrations===
+
==Effects==
{{main|Migration Period|Turkic migration}}
+
Migration, like any other process, shapes many fields of life. These effects, which have both advantages and disadvantages, include:
[[Image:Karte völkerwanderung.jpg|thumb|400px|2nd to 5th century migrations. See also [[:Image:World 820.png|map of the world in AD 820]].]]
 
Western historians refer to the period of migrations that separated [[Classical antiquity|Antiquity]] from the [[Middle Ages]] in [[Europe]] as the ''Great Migrations'' or as the [[Migrations Period]]. This period is further divided into two phases.
 
  
The first phase, from 300 to 500 C.E., saw the movement of [[Germanic tribes|Germanic]] and other tribes and ended with the settlement of these peoples in the areas of the former Western [[Roman Empire]], essentially causing its demise. (See also: [[Ostrogoths]], [[Visigoths]], [[Burgundians]], [[Suebi]], [[Alamanni]] [[Marcomanni]]).
+
*Changes in population distribution: Human migration has had a significant effect on world geography, contributing to the development of separate cultures, the diffusion of cultures, and the complex mix of cultures and multi-cultural populations found in many parts of of the world.
 
+
*Mixing of different cultures and races: This has often led to negative social behaviors–tensions in society between majorities and minorities, followed often by local struggles, [[racism]] and [[racial discrimination]].<ref>Alferdteen Harrison, ''Black Exodus: The Great Migration from the American South'' (University Press of Mississippi, 1991, ISBN 087805491X).</ref> Increases in criminality may also result.<ref>Julie A, Phillips, [https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI9913511/ Crime and migration: Three essays examining causes and consequences of two urban social challenges] January 1, 1998. Retrieved December 22, 2022.</ref> However, effects in different societies vary. There are also some positive cultural effects of migration, for example exchange of cultural experience and new knowledge.  
The second phase, between 500 and 900 C.E., saw [[Slavic peoples|Slavic]], [[Turkic people|Turkic]] and other tribes on the move, re-settling in Eastern Europe and gradually making it predominantly Slavic. Moreover, more  Germanic tribes migrated within Europe during this period, including the  [[Lombards]] (to [[Italy]]), and the  [[Angles]], [[Saxons]], and [[Jutes]] (to the [[British Isles]]). See also: [[Eurasian Avars|Avars]], [[Bulgars]], [[Huns]], [[Arabs]], [[Vikings]], [[Varangian]]s. The last phase of the migrations saw the coming of the [[Magyars|Hungarians]] to the [[Great Hungarian Plain|Pannonian plain]].
+
*Demographic consequences: Since migration is selective of particular age groups, migrants are mostly young and productive. This can cause a demographic crisis—[[population aging]], that in turn can be followed by economic problems (a shrinking economically active population has to finance an extending inactive population).
 
+
*Economic results, which are of the greatest importance for the development of countries.
German historians of the [[19th century]] referred to these Germanic migrations as the ''Völkerwanderung'', the migrations of the peoples.
 
 
 
The European migration period is connected with the simultaneous [[Turkic expansion]] which at first displaced other peoples towards the west, and by High Medieval times, the [[Seljuk Turks]] themselves reached the Mediterranean.
 
 
 
===Medieval and Early Modern Europe===
 
The medieval period, although often presented as a time of limited human mobility and slow social change in the history of Europe, in fact saw widespread movement of peoples. The [[Vikings]] from [[Scandinavia]] raided all over Europe from 8th century and settled in many places, including [[Normandy]], the north of [[England]], [[Scotland]] and [[Ireland]] (most of whose urban centres were founded by the Vikings). The Normans later conquered the Saxon Kingdom of England, most of Ireland, southern Italy and [[Sicily]] -although the migration associated with these conquests was relatively limited - the Normans in most cases forming only a small ruling class. Iberia was invaded by [[Muslim]] [[Arabs]], [[Berbers]] and [[Moors]] in the eighth century, founding new Kingdoms such as [[al Andalus]] and bringing with them a wave of settlers from North Africa.
 
 
 
In the other direction, European [[Christian]] armies conquered [[Palestine]] for a time during the [[Crusades]] 11th-13th centuries, founding three Christian kingdoms and settling them with Christian Knights and their families. This permanent migration was relatively small however and was one of the reasons why the Crusaders eventually lost the their hold on the Holy Lands. 
 
 
 
In the 14th century, German military colonists settled the [[Baltic region|Baltic]] region, becoming a ruling elite. At the end of the Middle Ages, the [[Roma people|Roma]] arrived in Europe (to [[Iberian Peninsula|Iberia]] and the [[Balkans]]) from the Middle East, originating from the [[Indus river]].
 
 
 
Internal European migration stepped up in the Early Modern Period. In this period, major migration within Europe included the recruiting by monarchs of landless labourers to settle depopulated or uncultivated regions and a series of forced migration caused by religious persecution. Notable examples of this phenomenon include mass migration of Protestants from the [[Spanish Netherlands]] to the [[Dutch Republic]] after the 1580s, the expelling of [[Jews]] and [[Moriscos]] from [[Spain]] in the 1590s and the expulsion of the [[Huguenots]] from [[France]] in the 1680s. Since the 14th century, the [[Serbs]] started leaving the areas of their medieval Kingdom and Empire that was overrun by the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] Turks and migrated to the north, to the lands of today's [[Vojvodina]] (northern Serbia), which was ruled by the [[Kingdom of Hungary]] at that time. The [[Habsburg]] monarchs of Austria encouraged them to settle on their frontier with the Turks and provide military service by granting them free land and religious toleration. The two greatest [[Great Serbian Migrations|migrations]] took place in 1690 and 1737. Other instances of labour recruitments include the [[Plantations of Ireland]] - the settling of Ireland with Protestant English colonists in the period 1560-1690 and the recruitment of [[Volga Germans|German]]s by [[Catherine the Great]] of Russia to settle the [[Volga]] region in the 18th century.  
 
 
 
European [[Colonialism]] from the 16th to the early 20th centuries led to an imposition of a European [[colonies]] in many regions of the world, particularly in the [[Americas]], [[South Asia]], [[Sub-Saharan Africa]] and [[Australia]], where European languages remain either prevalent or in frequent use as administrative languages. Major human migration before the 18th century was largely state directed. For instance, Spanish emigration to the New World was limited to settlers from [[Crown of Castile|Castile]] who were intended to acts as soldiers or administrators. Mass immigration was not encouraged due to a labour shortage in Europe (of which Spain was the worst affected by a depopulation of its core territories in the 17th century). Europeans also tended to die of tropical diseases in the New World in this period and for this reason, England, France and Spain preferred using [[slaves]] to free labour in their American possessions. This changed in the 18th century due to population increases in Europe. Spanish restrictions on emigration to Latin America were revoked and the English colonies in North America saw a major influx of settlers attracted by cheap or free land, economic opportunity and religious toleration. By 1800, European emigration had transformed the demographic character of the American continent. Their influence elsewhere was less pronounced as in South Asia and Africa, European settlement in this period was limited to thin layer of administrators, traders and soldiers.
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 265: Line 150:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
+
*Barlai, Melani, Birte Faehnrich, Christina Griessler, and Markus Rhomberg (eds.). ''The Migrant Crisis: European Perspectives and National Discourses''. LIT Verlag, 2017. ISBN 978-3643908025
Patrick Manning, ''Migration in World History'' (2005) p 132-162.<br />
+
*Bentley, Jerry. ''Old World Encounters: Cross-Cultural Contacts and Exchanges in Pre-Modern Times''. Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 0195076400
Adam McKeown, 'Global migration, 1846-1940' in: ''Journal of Global History'' (June 2004).
+
*Bryant, Edwin. ''The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate''. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0195137779
 
+
*Castles, Steven. ''The Age of Migration, Third Edition: International Population Movements in the Modern World''. The Guilford Press, 2003. ISBN 1572309008
 
+
*Gimbutas, Marija. ''Bronze Age cultures in Central and Eastern Europe''. The Hague/London: De Gruyter Mouton, 1965. ISBN 3111283410
* Bauder, Harald ''Labor Movement: How Migration Regulates Labor Markets'', New York: Oxford University Press 2006
+
*Harrison, Alferdteen. ''Black Exodus: The Great Migration from the American South''. University Press of Mississippi, 1991. ISBN 087805491X
* Behdad, Ali, ''A Forgetful Nation: On Immigration and Cultural Identity in the United States'', Duke UP 2005
+
*Manning, Patrick. ''Migration in World History''. Routledge, 2005. ISBN 0415311470
* Hoerder, Dirk ''Cultures in Contact. World Migrations in the Second Millennium'', Duke University Press 2002
+
*Messina, Anthony. ''The Migration Reader: Exploring Politics And Policies'', Lynne Riener Publishers, 2005. ISBN 1588263398
* Manning, Patrick ''Migration in World History'', New York and London: Routledge 2005
+
*Otte, Marcel. ''Le Paléolithique Inférieur et Moyen en Europe''Paris: A Colin, 1996. ISBN 2200013892
* ''Migration for Employment'' Paris: OECD Publications, 2004.
+
*Renfrew, A. C. ''Archaeology and Language: The Puzzle of Indo-European Origins''. London: Pimlico, 1987. ISBN 0712666125
* ''OECD International Migration Outlook 2007'', Paris: OECD Publications, 2007
 
* [[Abdelmalek Sayad]], ''The Suffering of the Immigrant'', Preface by [[Pierre Bourdieu]], Polity Press 2004
 
* {{1911}}
 
 
 
 
 
==External links==
 
 
 
*[http://www.oecd.org/document/2/0,3343,en_2649_33729_38060354_1_1_1_1,00.html OECD International Migration Data 2006]
 
*[http://www.swivel.com/data_sets/show/1004869 Net Human Migration Rate in OECD Countries]
 
*[http://www.swivel.com/data_sets/show/1004875 Inflows of assylum seekers into OECD countries]
 
*[http://www.oecd.org/document/25/0,3343,en_2649_33729_38797017_1_1_1_1,00.html OECD International Migration Outlook 2007] (subscription service)
 
*[http://www.oecd.org/document/2/0,3343,en_2649_33729_38060354_1_1_1_1,00.html International Migration Data 2006]
 
  
 
{{credits|Human_migration|155190625|Historical_migration|156361960}}
 
{{credits|Human_migration|155190625|Historical_migration|156361960}}

Latest revision as of 16:22, 23 December 2022


Hypothesized map of human migration based on Mitochondrial DNA

Human migration denotes any movement by human beings from one locality to another, often over long distances or in large groups. Humans are known to have migrated extensively throughout prehistory and human history. The movement of populations in modern times has continued under the form of both voluntary migration within one's region, country, or beyond, and involuntary migration (which includes trafficking in human beings/slave trade and ethnic cleansing). The people who migrate are called migrants, or, more specifically, emigrants, immigrants, or settlers, depending on historical setting, circumstance, and perspective.

Human migrations, initiated for whatever reason, have affected the grand epochs in history, changing forever the demographic landscape of lands throughout the world, bringing, on some occasions, innovation and mutual benefits, and on others destruction and suffering. While social scientists and historians look for external causes for these happenings, including climate change and political or religious oppression, religious scholars and people of faith regard many such events as the playing out of God's providence, bringing humankind ever closer to a time when human beings fill the earth and live as one family in peace and harmony.

Types of migrations

Migrations can be domestic or international. In domestic migration people move within their homeland, be it from one town to the next or across the country. This may take the form of moving from one level of density to another such as rural to urban (or vice versa).

International migration involves crossing international borders. International migration can occur over relatively short distances such as that in between the member states of the European Union or can involve moves to entirely different continents such as from Asia to Africa.

Migration is generally considered a permanent action, although some people migrate to other places for rather long periods of time (months or years) rather than permanently.

Voluntary and forced migration

Migration is usually divided into voluntary migration and involuntary or forced migration.

Voluntary migration is based on the initiative and the free will of the person and is influenced by a combination of factors: economic, political, and social: either in the migrants` country of origin (determinant factors or "push factors") or in the country of destination (attraction factors or "pull factors"). "Push" factors are the negative aspects (for example wars) of the country of origin, often decisive in people's choice to emigrate. The "pull" factors are the positive aspects of a different country that encourages people to emigrate to seek a better life.

Forced migration Forced migration is:

a general term that refers to the movements of refugees and internally displaced people (those displaced by conflicts within their country of origin) as well as people displaced by natural or environmental disasters, chemical or nuclear disasters, famine, or development projects.[1]

These different causes of migration leave people with only one choice, to move to a new environment. Immigrants leave their beloved homes to seek a life in camps, spontaneous settlement, and countries of asylum.[2] To these reasons can be added human trafficking, in which people are sold into slavery, usually far from their country of origin.

Niger highway overloaded truck 2007

Depending on the goal and reason for relocation, people who migrate can be divided into three categories: migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers. Each category is defined broadly as the mixed circumstances that motivate a person to change their location.

Migrants are traditionally described as persons who change the country of their residence for general reasons and purposes. These purposes may include the search for better job opportunities or healthcare needs. This term is the most generally defined one as anyone changing their geographic location permanently can be considered a migrant.[3]

Refugees, by contrast are persons who do not willingly relocate. The reasons for the refugees' migration usually involve war actions within the country or other forms of oppression, coming either from the government or non-governmental sources.

Asylum seekers are persons who also leave their country unwillingly, yet, who also do not do so under oppressing circumstances such as war or death threats. The motivation to leave the country for asylum seekers might involve an unstable economic or political situation or high rates of crime. Thus, asylum seekers relocate predominantly to escape the degradation of the quality of their lives.[3]

Nomadic movements usually are not regarded as migrations, as the movement is generally seasonal, there is no intention to settle in the new place, and only a few people have retained this form of lifestyle in modern times. Temporary movement for travel, tourism, or pilgrimages is also not regarded as migration, in the absence of an intention to live and settle in the visited places.

History

Map of early human migrations according to mitochondrial population genetics (numbers are millennia before present).

Human migration has taken place at all times and in the greatest variety of circumstances. They have involved tribal, national, class, and individual levels. Causes have been climatic, political, economic, religious, or simply for love of adventure. Its causes and results are fundamental for the study of ethnology, of political and social history, and of political economy.

The pressures of human migrations, whether as outright conquest or by slow cultural infiltration and resettlement, have affected the grand epochs in history, such as the fall of the Western Roman Empire; under the form of colonization, migration has transformed the world, as for example in the settlements of Australia and the Americas.

Early migrations

Historical migration of human populations began with the movement of Homo erectus out of Africa across Eurasia about a million years ago. Homo sapiens appears to have colonized all of Africa about 150 millennia ago, moved out of Africa some 80 millennia ago, and spread across Eurasia and to Australia before 40 millennia ago. Migration to the Americas took place about 20 to 15 millennia ago, and by two millennia ago, most of the Pacific Islands were colonized. Later population movements notably include the Neolithic revolution, Indo-European expansion, and the Early Medieval Great Migrations including Turkic expansion. The Age of Exploration and European Colonialism led to an accelerated pace of migration since Early Modern times.

Indo-Europeans

Scheme of Indo-European migrations from c. 4000 to 1000 B.C.E. according to the Kurgan hypothesis. The purple area corresponds to the assumed Urheimat (Samara culture, Sredny Stog culture). The red area corresponds to the area which may have been settled by Indo-European-speaking peoples up to ca. 2500 B.C.E.; the orange area to 1000 B.C.E.

The Indo-European migration had variously been dated to the end of the Neolithic (Marija Gimbutas: Corded ware, Yamna, Kurgan), the early Neolithic (Colin Renfrew, 1987: Starčevo-Körös, Linearbandkeramic) and the late Palaeolithic (Marcel Otte 1996, Paleolithic Continuity Theory).

The speakers of the Proto-Indo-European language are usually believed to have originated to the North of the Black Sea (today Eastern Ukraine and Southern Russia), and from there they gradually migrated into, and spread their language to, Anatolia, Europe, and Central Asia Iran and South Asia starting from around the end of the Neolithic period. Other theories, such as that of Colin Renfrew, posit their development much earlier, in Anatolia, and claim that Indo-European languages and culture spread as a result of the agricultural revolution in the early Neolithic.

Relatively little is known about the inhabitants of pre-Indo-European "Old Europe." They are believed to have been hunter-gatherers. The Basque language remains from that era, as do the indigenous languages of the Caucasus. The Sami are genetically distinct among the peoples of Europe, but the Sami languages, as part of the Finno-Ugric languages, spread into Europe about the same time as the Indo-European languages. However, since that period speakers of other Finno-Ugric languages such as the Finns and the Estonians have had more contact with other Europeans, thus today sharing more genes with them than the Sami.

Bronze Age

The earliest migrations we can reconstruct from historical sources are those of the second millennium B.C.E. It is speculated that the Proto-Indo-Iranians began their expansion from ca. 2000 B.C.E., the Indo-Aryan migration hypothesis suggests that they reached Assyria in the west and the Punjab in the east by ca. 1500 B.C.E.[4] In the Late Bronze Age, the Aegean and Anatolia were overrun by moving populations, summarized as the "Sea Peoples," leading to the collapse of the Hittite Empire and ushering in the Iron Age.

One common hypothesis of the Bantu expansion

The Bantu first originated around the Benue-Cross rivers area in southeastern Nigeria and spread over Africa to the Zambia area. Sometime in the second millennium B.C.E., perhaps triggered by the drying of the Sahara and pressure from the migration of people from the Sahara into the region, they were forced to expand into the rainforests of central Africa (phase I). In the first millennium B.C.E., they began a more rapid second phase of expansion beyond the forests into southern and eastern Africa, and again in the first millennium C.E. as new agricultural techniques and plants were developed in Zambia. By about 1000 C.E. it had reached modern day Zimbabwe and South Africa.

Early Iron Age

The Dorian invasion of Greece led to the Greek Dark Ages. Very little is known about the period of the twelfth to ninth centuries B.C.E., but there were significant population movements throughout Anatolia and the Iranian plateau. Iranian peoples invaded the territory of modern Iran in this period, taking over the Elamite Empire. The Urartians were displaced by Armenians, and the Cimmerians and the Mushki migrated from the Caucasus into Anatolia. A Thraco-Cimmerian connection links these movements to the Proto-Celtic world of central Europe, leading to the introduction of Iron to Europe and the Celtic expansion to western Europe and the British Isles around 500 B.C.E.

The great migrations

Second to fifth century migrations.

Western historians refer to the period of migrations that separated Antiquity from the Middle Ages in Europe as the Great Migrations or as the Migrations Period. This period is further divided into two phases.

The first phase, from 300 to 500 C.E., saw the movement of Germanic and other tribes and ended with the settlement of these peoples in the areas of the former Western Roman Empire, essentially causing its demise.

The second phase, between 500 and 900 C.E., saw Slavic, Turkic and other tribes on the move, re-settling in Eastern Europe and gradually making it predominantly Slavic. Moreover, more Germanic tribes migrated within Europe during this period, including the Lombards (to Italy), and the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes (to the British Isles). The last phase of the migrations saw the coming of the Hungarians to the Pannonian plain.

German historians of the nineteenth century referred to these Germanic migrations as the Völkerwanderung, the migrations of the peoples.

The European migration period is connected with the simultaneous Turkic expansion which at first displaced other peoples towards the west, and by High Medieval times, the Seljuk Turks themselves reached the Mediterranean.

Medieval and early modern Europe

The medieval period, although often presented as a time of limited human mobility and slow social change in the history of Europe, in fact saw widespread movement of peoples. The Vikings from Scandinavia raided all over Europe from the eighth century and settled in many places, including Normandy, the north of England, Scotland, and Ireland (most of whose urban centers were founded by the Vikings). The Normans later conquered the Saxon Kingdom of England, most of Ireland, southern Italy and Sicily—although the migration associated with these conquests was relatively limited—the Normans in most cases forming only a small ruling class. Iberia was invaded by Muslim Arabs, Berbers, and Moors in the eighth century, founding new Kingdoms such as al Andalus and bringing with them a wave of settlers from North Africa.

In the other direction, European Christian armies conquered Palestine for a time during the Crusades in the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, founding three Christian kingdoms and settling them with Christian Knights and their families. This permanent migration was relatively small however and was one of the reasons why the Crusaders eventually lost their hold on the Holy Lands.

In the fourteenth century, German military colonists settled the Baltic region, becoming a ruling elite. At the end of the Middle Ages, the Roma arrived in Europe (to Iberia and the Balkans) from the Middle East, originating from the Indus river.

Internal European migration stepped up in the Early Modern Period. In this period, major migration within Europe included the recruiting by monarchs of landless laborers to settle depopulated or uncultivated regions and a series of forced migration caused by religious persecution. Notable examples of this phenomenon include mass migration of Protestants from the Spanish Netherlands to the Dutch Republic after the 1580s, the expelling of Jews and Moriscos from Spain in the 1590s, and the expulsion of the Huguenots from France in the 1680s.

Since the fourteenth century, the Serbs started leaving the areas of their medieval Kingdom and Empire that was overrun by the Ottoman Turks and migrated to the north, to the lands of today's Vojvodina (northern Serbia), which was ruled by the Kingdom of Hungary at that time. The Habsburg monarchs of Austria encouraged them to settle on their frontier with the Turks and provide military service by granting them free land and religious toleration. The two greatest migrations took place in 1690 and 1737. Other instances of labor recruitments include the Plantations of Ireland - the settling of Ireland with Protestant English colonists in the period 1560-1690 and the recruitment of Germans by Catherine the Great of Russia to settle the Volga region in the eighteenth century.

European Colonialism from the sixteenth to the early twentieth centuries led to an imposition of European colonies in many regions of the world, particularly in the Americas, South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Australia, where European languages remain either prevalent or in frequent use as administrative languages. Major human migration before the eighteenth century was largely state directed. For instance, Spanish emigration to the New World was limited to settlers from Castile who were intended to acts as soldiers or administrators. Mass immigration was not encouraged due to a labor shortage in Europe (of which Spain was the worst affected by a depopulation of its core territories in the seventeenth century). Europeans also tended to die of tropical diseases in the New World in this period and for this reason, England, France, and Spain preferred using slaves to free labor in their American possessions.

This changed in the eighteenth century due to population increases in Europe. Spanish restrictions on emigration to Latin America were revoked and the English colonies in North America saw a major influx of settlers attracted by cheap or free land, economic opportunity, and religious toleration. By 1800, European emigration had transformed the demographic character of the American continent. Their influence elsewhere was less pronounced as in South Asia and Africa, European settlement in this period was limited to thin layer of administrators, traders, and soldiers.

Industrialization

While the pace of migration had accelerated since the eighteenth century (including the involuntary slave trade), it would increase further in the nineteenth century. Manning distinguished three major types of migration: labor migration, refugee migrations, and lastly urbanization.[5] Millions of agricultural workers left the countryside and moved to the cities causing unprecedented levels of urbanization. This phenomenon began in Britain in the late eighteenth century and spread around the world, continuing to this day in many areas.

Industrialization encouraged migration wherever it appeared. The increasingly global economy globalized the labor market. The Atlantic slave trade diminished sharply after 1820, which gave rise to self-bound contract labor migration from Europe and Asia to plantations. Also overpopulation, open agricultural frontiers, and rising industrial centers attracted voluntary, encouraged and sometimes coerced migration. Moreover, migration was significantly eased by improved transportation techniques.

Twentieth century

Net migration rates January 2017: positive (blue) and negative (orange)

Between 1846 and 1940, mass migrations occurred world wide. The size and speed of transnational migratory movements became unprecedented. Some 55 millions of migrants moved from Europe to America, and an additional 2.5 million moved from Asia to America. Of this transatlantic migrations, 65 percent went to the United States. Other major receiving countries were Argentina, Canada, Brazil, and Cuba.

During this same period similar large numbers of people migrated over large distances within Asia. Southeastern Asia received 50 million migrants, mainly from India and south China. North Asia—Manchuria, Siberia, Central Asia, and Japan together—received another 50 million. Less is known about exact numbers of the migrations from and within Africa in this period, but Africa experienced a small net immigration between 1850 and 1950, from a variety of origins.

Transnational labor migration reached a peak of three million migrants per year in the early twentieth century. Italy, Norway, Ireland, and the Quongdong region of China were regions with especially high emigration rates during these years. These large migration flows influenced the process of nation state formation in many ways. Immigration restrictions have been developed, as well as diaspora cultures and myths that reflect the importance of migration to the foundation of certain nations, like the American melting pot. The transnational labor migration fell to a lower level from the 1930s to the 1960s and then rebounded.

The twentieth century also experienced an increase in migratory flows caused by war and politics, with large numbers of refugees feeling their homelands that had been taken over by factions hostile to their ethnicity or religion. Muslims moved from the Balkans to Turkey, while Christians moved the other way, during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. 400,000 Jews moved to Palestine in the early twentieth century. The Russian Civil War caused some 3 million Russians, Poles, and Germans to migrate out of the Soviet Union. World War II and decolonization also caused migrations.

Twenty-first century

Migrations continue in the twenty-first century, both voluntary and involuntary.

In 2015 Europe experienced a large influx of Syrian refugees, when 1.3 million people requested asylum.[6] Europe had already begun registering increased numbers of refugee arrivals in 2010 due to a confluence of conflicts in parts of the Middle East, Asia, and Africa, particularly the wars in Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan, but also terrorist insurgencies in Nigeria and Pakistan, and long-running human rights abuses in Eritrea, all contributing to refugee flows. Many millions initially sought refuge in comparatively stable countries near their origin, but while these countries were largely free of war, living conditions for refugees were often very poor. As it became clear that the wars in their home countries would not end in the foreseeable future, many fled to Europe in hopes of finding permanent homes.

The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (Global Compact for Migration) was a milestone in migration governance, as the first internationally negotiated statement striking a balance between migrants' rights and the principle of States' sovereignty over their territory. Although not legally binding, the Global Compact for Migration was adopted by consensus in December 2018 at a United Nations conference in which more than 150 United Nations Member States participated and, formally endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly on December 19, 2018.[7]

Causes

The causes of migration can be seen as a series of push and pull factors—those factors which either forcefully push someone into migration or attract them. Push and pull factors are usually considered as north and south poles on a magnet.

Push factors

A push factor is a forceful factor, and a factor which relates to the country the person is migrating from. It is generally a problem which results in people wanting to leave. Different types of push factors inclued:

  • Poor medical care
  • Not enough jobs
  • Few opportunities
  • Primitive conditions
  • Political fear
  • Fear of torture and mistreatment
  • Not being able to practice religion
  • Loss of wealth
  • Natural disasters (including changes in climate)

Pull factors

A pull factor is something concerning the country a person migrates to. It is generally a good thing that attracts people to a certain place.

  • Chances of getting a job
  • Better living standards
  • Enjoyment
  • Education
  • Better medical care
  • Security
  • Family links

Effects

Migration, like any other process, shapes many fields of life. These effects, which have both advantages and disadvantages, include:

  • Changes in population distribution: Human migration has had a significant effect on world geography, contributing to the development of separate cultures, the diffusion of cultures, and the complex mix of cultures and multi-cultural populations found in many parts of of the world.
  • Mixing of different cultures and races: This has often led to negative social behaviors–tensions in society between majorities and minorities, followed often by local struggles, racism and racial discrimination.[8] Increases in criminality may also result.[9] However, effects in different societies vary. There are also some positive cultural effects of migration, for example exchange of cultural experience and new knowledge.
  • Demographic consequences: Since migration is selective of particular age groups, migrants are mostly young and productive. This can cause a demographic crisis—population aging, that in turn can be followed by economic problems (a shrinking economically active population has to finance an extending inactive population).
  • Economic results, which are of the greatest importance for the development of countries.

Notes

  1. What is Forced Migration? The Harriet and Robert Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  2. Elizabeth Colson, Forced Migration and the Anthropological Response Journal of Refugee Studies 16(1) (2003): 1–19. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Mark Blackwood, Migration vs. Immigration: Understanding the Nuances The Word Point, August 27, 2020. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  4. Edwin Bryant, The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate (Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0195137779).
  5. Patrick Manning, Migration in World History (Routledge, 2005, ISBN 0415311470).
  6. Melani Barlai, Birte Faehnrich, Christina Griessler, and Markus Rhomberg (eds.), The Migrant Crisis: European Perspectives and National Discourses (LIT Verlag, 2017, ISBN 978-3643908025).
  7. General Assembly officially adopts roadmap for migrants to improve safety, ease suffering United Nations, December 19, 2018. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  8. Alferdteen Harrison, Black Exodus: The Great Migration from the American South (University Press of Mississippi, 1991, ISBN 087805491X).
  9. Julie A, Phillips, Crime and migration: Three essays examining causes and consequences of two urban social challenges January 1, 1998. Retrieved December 22, 2022.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Barlai, Melani, Birte Faehnrich, Christina Griessler, and Markus Rhomberg (eds.). The Migrant Crisis: European Perspectives and National Discourses. LIT Verlag, 2017. ISBN 978-3643908025
  • Bentley, Jerry. Old World Encounters: Cross-Cultural Contacts and Exchanges in Pre-Modern Times. Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 0195076400
  • Bryant, Edwin. The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0195137779
  • Castles, Steven. The Age of Migration, Third Edition: International Population Movements in the Modern World. The Guilford Press, 2003. ISBN 1572309008
  • Gimbutas, Marija. Bronze Age cultures in Central and Eastern Europe. The Hague/London: De Gruyter Mouton, 1965. ISBN 3111283410
  • Harrison, Alferdteen. Black Exodus: The Great Migration from the American South. University Press of Mississippi, 1991. ISBN 087805491X
  • Manning, Patrick. Migration in World History. Routledge, 2005. ISBN 0415311470
  • Messina, Anthony. The Migration Reader: Exploring Politics And Policies, Lynne Riener Publishers, 2005. ISBN 1588263398
  • Otte, Marcel. Le Paléolithique Inférieur et Moyen en Europe. Paris: A Colin, 1996. ISBN 2200013892
  • Renfrew, A. C. Archaeology and Language: The Puzzle of Indo-European Origins. London: Pimlico, 1987. ISBN 0712666125

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