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The
study was conducted by three geographic researchers from the Wittgenstein
Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital in Vienna. The researchers
presented their data in five-year increments, from 1990 to 2010. Their research
is unique, because it turned static census counts from over 150 countries into
a dynamic flow of human traffic.
Migration
data is counted in two ways: Stock and flow. “The stocks are the number of
migrants living in a country,” says Nikola Sander, one of the study’s
authors. Stock is relatively easy to get—you just count who is in the country
at a given point of time. Flow is trickier. It’s the rate of human traffic over
time.
Keeping
accurate account of where people are moving has stymied the UN, and researchers
and policy-makers in general, for a while. The European Union keeps good
track of migrant flows, but elsewhere the data are sparse.
Static measurements are plentiful, but it is hard to use them to get a
picture of how people are moving on a broad scale, because each country
has its own methodology for collecting census data.
Last
year, however, the UN brought stock data from nearly 200 countries
into harmony by erasing the methodological seams between them. To turn
this stock data into five-year flow estimates, the researchers used
statistical interpolations from stock data from the UN, taken
mostly from 10-year country censuses, but supplemented with population
registers and other national surveys.
While
the results of the migration study aren’t particularly groundbreaking, there
are two interesting insights:
1)
Adjusted for population growth, the global migration rate has stayed roughly
the same since around since 1995 (it was higher from 1990-1995).
2)
It’s not the poorest countries sending people to the richest countries, it’s
countries in transition—still poor, but with some education and mobility—that
are the highest migratory contributors.
“One
of the conclusions they make in the paper, is the idea as countries develop,
they continue to send more migrants, and at some point they become
migrant-receiving regions themselves,” says Fernando Riosmena, a
geographer from the University of Colorado, who did not contribute to this
research, but is collaborating with one of the authors on a future paper.
A
few other noteworthy results:
1)
The largest regional migration is from Southeast Asia to the Middle East.
This is largely driven by the huge, oil-driven, construction
booms happening on the Arabian Peninsula.
2)
The biggest flow between individual countries is the steady stream from Mexico
to the US. (In fact, the US is the largest single migrant destination)
3) There’s
a huge circulation of migrants among sub-Saharan African countries.
This migration dwarfs the number leaving Africa, but the media pay more
attention the latter because of the austerity-driven
immigration debates in Europe.
My apologies for not crediting the source of the above information... see below...
My apologies for not crediting the source of the above information... see below...
Thanks a lot for featuring our work on global international migration on your blog. We’re very happy about all the positive feedback we’re getting.
I’d just like to ask you to state the story in Quartz (qz.com/192440) as the source of your blog post. And our webpagewww.global-migration.info as the source of the circular graphic.
Thank you!
Nikola

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