The role of migration and demographic change in small island futures

IF 1.4 4区 社会学 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY Asian and Pacific Migration Journal Pub Date : 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1177/01171968211044082
L. Speelman, R. Nicholls, Ricardo Safra de Campos
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Low-lying atoll islands are especially threatened by anticipated sea-level rise, and migration is often mentioned as a potential response of these island societies. Further, small island states are developing population, economic and adaptation policies to plan the future. Policies, such as raising of islands or land reclamation, require a long-term vision on populations and migration. However, population and migration systems in small island settings are poorly understood. To address this deficiency requires an approach that considers changing environmental and socio-economic factors and individual migration decision-making. This article introduces the conceptual model of migration and explores migration within one small island nation, the Maldives, as an example. Agent-based simulations of internal migration from 1985–2014 are used as a basis to explore a range of potential demographic futures up to 2050. The simulations consider a set of consistent demographic, environmental, policy and international migration narratives, which describe a range of key uncertainties. The capital island Malé has experienced significant population growth over the last decades, growing from around 67,000 to 153,000 inhabitants from 2000 to 2014, and comprising about 38 percent of the national population in 2014. In all future narratives, which consider possible demographic, governance, environmental and globalization changes, the growth of Malé continues while many other islands are effectively abandoned. The analysis suggests that migration in the Maldives has a strong inertia, and radical change to the environmental and/or socio-economic drivers would be needed for existing trends to change. Findings from this study may have implications for national development and planning for climate change more widely in island nations.
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移徙和人口变化对小岛屿未来的作用
地势低洼的环礁岛屿尤其受到预期的海平面上升的威胁,人们经常提到移民是这些岛屿社会的潜在反应。此外,小岛屿国家正在制定人口、经济和适应政策,以规划未来。诸如抬高岛屿或填海造地等政策需要对人口和移民有长远的眼光。然而,人们对小岛屿地区的人口和移徙制度了解甚少。要解决这一不足,需要采取一种考虑到不断变化的环境和社会经济因素以及个人移徙决策的办法。本文介绍了移民的概念模型,并以马尔代夫这个小岛屿国家为例探讨了移民问题。基于主体的1985-2014年国内移民模拟被用作探索到2050年的潜在人口未来的基础。模拟考虑了一系列一致的人口、环境、政策和国际移民叙述,这些叙述描述了一系列关键的不确定性。在过去的几十年里,马尔代夫的首都岛经历了显著的人口增长,从2000年的约6.7万人增长到2014年的15.3万人,2014年占全国人口的38%左右。在考虑到可能发生的人口、治理、环境和全球化变化的所有未来叙述中,马尔代夫的增长仍在继续,而许多其他岛屿实际上已被遗弃。分析表明,马尔代夫的移民具有很强的惯性,需要对环境和/或社会经济驱动因素进行彻底改变,才能改变现有趋势。这项研究的结果可能对岛屿国家的国家发展和更广泛的气候变化规划产生影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
11.10%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The Asian and Pacific Migration Journal (APMJ) was launched in 1992, borne out of the conviction of the need to have a migration journal originating from the region that would provide a regional perspective of migration. Users will be able to read any article published from 1992 to 2006, to search all the articles by words or keywords and to copy or print partially or fully any article.
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