Social Sciences, asked by sunanabista, 1 day ago

Do you think migration is responsible for increase and decrease of population of any place justify your answer​

Answers

Answered by sam49874
0

Answer:

The rate of population growth is the rate of natural increase combined with the effects of migration. Thus a high rate of natural increase can be offset by a large net out-migration, and a low rate of natural increase can be countered by a high level of net in-migration.

Explanation:

Migration affect the population of the two particular areas. It increases the population of the place (new place), where people migrate in search of job opportunities and decreases the population of the area where people migrate from

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Answered by QuestionLover
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The Impact of Migration on Population Change

The developed regions as a whole will experience a  shrinking of population after 2040. According to the  medium-variant projection of the United Nations, the  world’s population is likely to increase from 7.6 billion in  2017 to 8.6 billion by 2030, the target year of the  Sustainable Development Goals, and to 9.8 billion in  2050.1 Most of this increase will take place in the  developing regions, while the developed regions will, for  the first time in recorded history, start to experience  negative population growth by around 2040 or 2050.  Under a scenario that assumes a net migration of zero,  the projected population of the developed regions would  be nine per cent smaller in 2050 than if current migration  trends continued. With no migration, or with equivalent  levels of immigration and emigration, the population of  the developing regions would be about one per cent  larger in 2050 than if current migration trends continued.

Human migrations have been fundamental to the broad sweep of human history and have themselves changed in basic ways over the epochs. Many of these historical migrations have by no means been the morally uplifting experiences depicted in mythologies of heroic conquerors, explorers, and pioneers; rather they frequently have been characterized by violence, destruction, bondage, mass mortality, and genocide—in other words, by human suffering of profound magnitudes.

Since any population that is not closed can be augmented or depleted by in-migration or out-migration, migration patterns must be considered carefully in analyzing population change. The common definition of human migration limits the term to permanent change of residence (conventionally, for at least one year), so as to distinguish it from commuting and other more frequent but temporary movements.

For more information: https://www.britannica.com/science/population-biology-and-anthropology/Migration

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