- Rural exodus
Rural exodus (or rural flight) is a term used to describe the migratory patterns that normally occur in a region following the mechanisation of
agriculture . In such a situation, there tends to be a movement of peoples from rural areas into urban areas. This is related to the fact that with mechanization (or any other change in the method of production which increases productivity) fewer people are needed to bring the same amount of agricultural output to market.The term is used in the
United States especially to describe the flight of people from rural areas in theGreat Plains region of theMidwest , where, historically, farmers have had difficulties in developing agriculture and have had to migrate to urban areas. An example of this is theDust Bowl in the 1930s, where people had to flee because of largedust storm s. This problem persists to the present day in the western parts ofGreat Plains states such asNebraska andKansas .Rural flight from the Great Plains has been mentioned in various fiction books, like in
John Steinbeck 's novel "The Grapes of Wrath ", in which a family from the Great Plains migrates toCalifornia during the Dust Bowl period of the 1930s.The phenomenon of rural flight is also well-known in
developing countries , where many people in the countryside live below thepoverty line . They migrate to cities to findemployment or to get money bybegging .References
* Ravenstein, E. G. (1885): "The Laws of Migration", in London: "
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society " - vol. 48, nº. June, 1885, pp. 167–227.
* Ravenstein, E. G. (1889): "The Laws of Migration", in London: "Journal of the Royal Statistical Society" - vol. 52, nº. June, 1889, pp. 241–301.ee also
*
Demographic history of the United States
*Diaspora
*Rural sociology
*Suburbs
*Urban sprawl
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