雪带向阳带迁移:一个时代的终结?

Sylvain Leduc, Daniel J. Wilson
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摘要

国内移民被认为是社会适应气候变化的一个重要渠道。我们在本文中指出,这一过程已经在美国发生。在过去的 50 年中,美国人从最寒冷的地方("雪带")向最炎热的地方("阳光带")迁移的趋势持续下降,而最炎热的地方则变得更加温暖。在最近的整整十年(2010-2020 年)中,县域人口增长和县域净移民率与历史上的极端高温日或极端寒冷日的平均值基本无关。在过去 50 年中,这些相关性的下降在各县、各通勤区和各州都是如此。城市和郊区县都是如此;农村县的相关性甚至出现了逆转。在所有教育群体中都是如此,其中受过四年或四年以上大学教育的人的相关性下降幅度最大。在年龄组中,20-29 岁年龄组和 60-69 岁年龄组的相关性最强,这表明气候对于那些处于人生阶段、需要做出长期地点选择的人来说是一个特别重要的因素。根据气候变化的预测,未来几十年美国最热的县极端高温将增加,最冷的县极端寒冷将减少,因此我们的研究结果表明,过去 50 年美国气候与移民相关性的 "枢轴 "可能会继续,从而导致 20 世纪雪带向阳带移民模式的逆转。
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Snow Belt to Sun Belt Migration: End of an Era?
Internal migration has been cited as a key channel by which societies will adapt to climate change. We show in this paper that this process has already been happening in the United States. Over the course of the past 50 years, the tendency of Americans to move from the coldest places (“snow belt”), which have become warmer, to the hottest places (“sun belt”), which have become hotter, has steadily declined. In the latest full decade, 2010-2020, both county population growth and county net migration rates were essentially uncorrelated with the historical means of either extreme heat days or extreme cold days. The decline in these correlations over the past 50 years is true across counties, across commuting zones, and across states. It holds for urban and suburban counties; for rural counties the correlations have even reversed. It holds for all educational groups, with the sharpest decline in correlations for those with four or more years of college. Among age groups, the pattern is strongest for age groups 20-29 and 60-69, suggestive of climate being an especially important factor for those in life stages involving long-term location choices. Given climate change projections for coming decades of increasing extreme heat in the hottest U.S. counties and decreasing extreme cold in the coldest counties, our findings suggest the “pivoting” in the U.S. climate-migration correlation over the past 50 years is likely to continue, leading to a reversal of the 20th century snow belt to sun belt migration pattern.
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