Environmental influences on African migration to Canada: focus group findings from Ottawa-Gatineau.

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  • Author(s): Veronis, Luisa; McLeman, Robert
  • Source:
    Population & Environment. Dec2014, Vol. 36 Issue 2, p234-251. 18p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts, 2 Graphs.
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    • Abstract:
      There is limited empirical evidence of how environmental conditions in the Global South may influence long-distance international migration to the Global North. This research note reports findings from seven focus groups held in Ottawa-Gatineau, Canada, with recent migrants from the Horn of Africa and francophone sub-Saharan Africa, where the role of environment in migration decision-making was discussed. Participants stated that those most affected by environmental challenges in their home countries lack the financial wherewithal to migrate to Canada. Participants also suggested that internal rural-urban migration patterns generated by environmental challenges in their home countries underlay socioeconomic factors that contributed to their own migration. In other words, environment is a second- or third-order contributor in a complex chain of interactions in the migrant source country that may lead to long-distance international migration by skilled and educated urbanites. These findings have informed the scope and detail of a larger, ongoing empirical study of environmental influences on immigration to Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
    • Abstract:
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