TY - JOUR
T1 - Migration and mobility on the Amazon frontier
AU - Caviglia-Harris, Jill L.
AU - Sills, Erin O.
AU - Mullan, Katrina
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments This research was generously supported by the National Science Foundation, under grants SES-0452852 and SES-0076549, as well as the National Security Education Program, the Organization of American States, the Institute for the Study of World Politics, and the McClure Fund Foundation. We would like to thank our survey team: Stella Maris de Souza Freitas, Eliane S. Pedlowski, Ivone Holz Seidel, Taís Helena Akatsu, Luciana Bussolaro Baraba, and Tânia Rodrigues Luz for their tireless efforts to complete the household surveys in 2005 as well as the local residents of Ouro Preto do Oeste for their participation. We would like to thank Marcos Pedlowski for logistical support, assistance with our survey registry, and for selecting a remarkable set of women to serve on our team. We would like to thank Crisanto Lopes de Oliveira for all of his work on our survey registry. We would also like to thank Carlos José da Silva for serving as a driver and guide to our GIS team. His local knowledge was invaluable. Finally, we would like to thank Daniel Harris and Suzanne McArdle for the creation of the maps that are included on this paper. A majority, if not all, of the data used in the analysis can be found at the archive of social science data for research and instruction at the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research of the University of Michigan. All location identifiers have been removed.
PY - 2013/3
Y1 - 2013/3
N2 - Migration patterns within tropical forest frontiers are highly complex and multidirectional, with movements to, from, and within these regions likely driven by different macro and micro factors. As such, several different conceptual models have been suggested to explain these dynamics. This paper uses data from a panel survey of households in a frontier region of the western Brazilian Amazon along with "second hand" reports on where people have moved to evaluate these conceptual models. Our rich data set, collected over nearly a decade from hundreds of households, allows us to compare households who arrived at different ages to assess predictions of the life cycle hypothesis; those who have been in the state (or on their properties) for different numbers of years to investigate the turnover hypothesis; those who arrived with different levels of capital to examine path dependence as suggested by conceptual models that focus on wealth dynamics; and the destination and purpose for moves from and within the study region to look for evidence of the frontier expansion hypothesis. We do not find any evidence for the turnover hypothesis, perhaps due to the favorable biophysical and market conditions in our study region. However, patterns in this region are consistent with all of the other conceptual models, reflecting the overlapping theoretical foundations of the models, and the complexity of migration and mobility on the frontier.
AB - Migration patterns within tropical forest frontiers are highly complex and multidirectional, with movements to, from, and within these regions likely driven by different macro and micro factors. As such, several different conceptual models have been suggested to explain these dynamics. This paper uses data from a panel survey of households in a frontier region of the western Brazilian Amazon along with "second hand" reports on where people have moved to evaluate these conceptual models. Our rich data set, collected over nearly a decade from hundreds of households, allows us to compare households who arrived at different ages to assess predictions of the life cycle hypothesis; those who have been in the state (or on their properties) for different numbers of years to investigate the turnover hypothesis; those who arrived with different levels of capital to examine path dependence as suggested by conceptual models that focus on wealth dynamics; and the destination and purpose for moves from and within the study region to look for evidence of the frontier expansion hypothesis. We do not find any evidence for the turnover hypothesis, perhaps due to the favorable biophysical and market conditions in our study region. However, patterns in this region are consistent with all of the other conceptual models, reflecting the overlapping theoretical foundations of the models, and the complexity of migration and mobility on the frontier.
KW - Brazilian Amazon
KW - Migration
KW - Panel data
KW - Population mobility
KW - Rural households
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84873524920&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11111-012-0169-1
DO - 10.1007/s11111-012-0169-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84873524920
SN - 0199-0039
VL - 34
SP - 338
EP - 369
JO - Population and Environment
JF - Population and Environment
IS - 3
ER -