The flow of peoples: international migration as a revolutionary force

Authors

  • Jean Claude Chesnais Institut National Des Etudes Démographiques

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46631/jefas.2008.v13n24.01

Keywords:

migratory flows, immigration, demographic transition, generation replacement level.

Abstract

History shows that migration usually moves from areas where population is growing fast to regions where this increase is slower. At present, immigration from poor regions to richer coun tries outstrips emigration from developed countries. A century ago in Europe and now in the poorest countries, migration has relieved tensions bred by declining mortality and accelerating popula tion growth. The map of international migration changes from decade to decade as each country’s demographic transition matures. Although historical migration fl ows still continue, this will not lead to a demographic explosion as fertility rates have declined signifi cantly and aging population increases all over the world. World population is estimated to remain stagnant at around 8 thousand million before it decreases slowly through this century. Thus, migration raises the challenge of a global multiethnic society

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References

History shows that migration usually moves from areas where population is growing fast to regions where this increase is slower. At present, immigration from poor regions to richer coun tries outstrips emigration from developed countries.

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Published

2008-06-30

How to Cite

Claude Chesnais, J. (2008). The flow of peoples: international migration as a revolutionary force. Journal of Economics, Finance and Administrative Science, 13(24), 11–25. https://doi.org/10.46631/jefas.2008.v13n24.01