a University of Washington.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2013;67(3):353-69. doi: 10.1080/00324728.2012.754927. Epub 2013 Jan 29.
This study analyses micro-level variability in migration during armed conflict in Nepal. The analysis is based on a multi-dimensional model of individual out-migration that examines the economic, social, and political consequences of conflict and how community organizations condition the experience of these consequences and systematically alter migration patterns. Detailed data on violent events and individual behaviour during the Maoist insurrection in Nepal and multi-level event-history analysis were used to test the model. The results indicate that community organizations reduced the effect of conflict on out-migration by providing resources that helped people cope with danger, as well as with the economic, social, and political consequences of the conflict. The evidence suggests that the conflict caused the population to be systematically redistributed in a way that will probably affect its future socio-demographic composition--the extent of the redistribution depending on the resources available in each community.
本研究分析了尼泊尔武装冲突期间移民的微观变化。该分析基于多维个体移民模型,考察了冲突的经济、社会和政治后果,以及社区组织如何影响这些后果的体验,并系统地改变移民模式。利用尼泊尔毛派叛乱期间暴力事件和个人行为的详细数据以及多层次事件历史分析来检验该模型。结果表明,社区组织通过提供帮助人们应对危险以及应对冲突的经济、社会和政治后果的资源,减少了冲突对移民的影响。有证据表明,冲突导致人口以一种可能影响其未来社会人口构成的方式被系统地重新分配,这种重新分配的程度取决于每个社区的可用资源。