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What are some of the reasons for
urban migration? Pushes and pulls
- pull:
- The conventional economic model
for development (increased agricultural productivity > reduced
farm labor needs > agricultural surplus > investment in
industrial capacity > employment creation, primarily in urban
areas)
- perception of economic opportunity
in cities (wage employment opportunities, pursuit of education,
household economic 'bet hedging', undervaluing of subsistence
economy, self-sustaining food production, sometimes only the success
stories make it back)
- push:
- rural hardship (drought, famine,
decreasing ability to support household, environmental degradation
- others?
What are some of the differences
between life in the city and in rural areas?
- economic activity
(subsistence, reciprocity versus more of a market,
cash economy)
- household division of labor--what
are some of the common activities that occupy rural women's time (it's
very important to get a good understanding of this--Boserup's chapter
9 is a good source)? How is domestic work in the city different, according
to Boserup?
- land tenure--property
rights, resource use are different--more likely private property rights
- pace of life
- access to resources
- access to 'vices'--prostitution,
drugs, unemployment
and crime
- cultural diversity--cities
can be melting pots for ethnic groups, people from different regions,
etc.
- physical infrastructure--Boserup
discusses how population density provides advantages in terms of public
works (getting things done for a community), and disadvantages in
terms of access to land and resources (more restricted access, rights).
Third world cities are often sprawling areas with little or no infrastructure
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What are some of the
changes households and women in them face as a result of urban migration?
those who stay behind:
- female-headed households: there
are more of these as a result, where men migrate (more often in Africa,
but in other large cities in Asia and Latin America to a lesser extent)
- increased responsibility (perhaps including
household food production, along with other productive and domestic
responsibilities), often limited authority, access to resources
families that migrate:
- women's domestic responsibilities in
town (how would they differ?);
- need for income (why?);
- fertility and family size (why might
this change?);
- opportunities for women (why might they
differ?);
- household financial obligations (in
rural areas, women normally devote 'disposable' income to children--clothing,
school needs, health)
women who migrate
- especially in parts of Asia (but also,
for instance, along U.S. Mexico border), women may migrate from rural
areas to seek employment in cities, in both the informal (petty commerce,
sex work) and formal sectors (often unskilled factory work) of the
economy. What happens if they can't find factory work?
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