History, asked by ukay61082, 3 months ago

Briefly describe ONE specific historical difference between the internal migration patterns within the United States in the period 1910-1940 and the internal migration patterns in the period 1941-1980.

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Answers

Answered by puskalsingh351
3

Explanation:

A few of the many factors migration models have incorporated include beliefs about employment probabilities, expected wages, expected costs of living, local amenities and tax rates, monetary and psychological moving costs, and the costs of buying and selling a home.

Internal migration or domestic migration is human migration within a country. ... Cross-border migration often occurs for political or economic reasons. A general trend of movement from rural to urban areas, in a process described as urbanisation, has also produced a form of internal migration

Answered by bandameedipravalika0
0

Answer:

Explanation:

The internal migration patterns within the United States in the period 1910-1940.

Southern African Americans were enlisted to labour in northern and midwestern industries after the First World War broke out in Europe. Due to the cessation of white males and immigrant employees quitting their jobs to join the war, there was a shortage of labour. Millions of Black southerners had the opportunity to leave Jim Crow, racial injustice, and lynchings thanks to employment in the North. Following the train routes, a large number of southern African American migrants established themselves in important cities including Philadelphia, New York, Detroit, Cincinnati, Chicago, and Milwaukee.

African Americans were able to benefit from the public schools, respectable employment, social life, and voting rights in the North. Life in the North was difficult, though. Black people resided in segregated areas of the city with subpar housing, squalor, underemployment, criminality, and abuse from local police enforcement and whites.

The internal migration patterns in the period 1941-1980.

The general demographic shift from rural to urban and suburban regions is explored in an overview of Euro-American internal migration in the US between 1941 and 1980. There are parallels to the Great Migration of African Americans, who continued to leave the South in the middle of the 20th century, despite the fact that the book is primarily on white Americans and their journeys. The majority of the migrants were drawn to the industrial regions in the North and West in the early years. Rural residents who had been long held in place by poor wages and political disenfranchisement were liberated during World War II, and a poor level of education. Numerous women were drawn to the North and West's metropolitan areas by the conflict as well. Following the war, there was an increase in migration, which encouraged white Americans to become less rural and more suburban. Racial segregation in housing, which made many suburban regions white and designated many urban districts for people of colour, contributed to the spread of suburbs across the nation. Suburbia saw phenomenal expansion as a result, going from 22 million residents in such regions in 1941 to twice that number in 1970. Later in the period, As the Steelbelt rusted, development plans, government infrastructure spending, and military sites fueled the West's emergence as a migratory magnet. Investments were being made in Sunbelt regions that were prepared to entice businesses and, of course, people, particularly from Rustbelt regions in the North. Half of the population of America lived in suburbs at the beginning of the twenty-first century.

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