Roland Hugh B, Curtis Katherine J
Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 122 Science Hall 550 North Park Street, Madison, WI 53706.
Community and Environmental Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 316B Agricultural Hall 1450 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706.
Popul Environ. 2020 Dec;42(2):161-182. doi: 10.1007/s11111-020-00357-3. Epub 2020 Aug 5.
This study investigates how geographic isolation interacts with declining environmental and economic conditions in Kiribati, an island nation wherein which limited access to financial resources amidst degrading environmental conditions potentially constrain capital-intensive, long distance migration. We examine whether geographic isolation modifies the tenets of two dominant environmental migration theses. The environmental scarcity thesis suggests that environmental degradation prompts migration by urging households to reallocate labor to new environments. In contrast, the environmental capital thesis asserts that declining natural resource availability restricts capital necessary for migration. Results show that the commonly applied environmental scarcity thesis is less valid and the environmental capital thesis is more relevant in geographically isolated places. Findings indicate that geographic isolation is an important dimension along which migration differences emerge. As overall environmental and economic conditions worsen, likelihoods of out-migration from less remote islands increase whereas likelihoods of out-migration from more isolated islands decrease.
本研究调查了地理隔离如何与基里巴斯不断恶化的环境和经济状况相互作用。基里巴斯是一个岛国,在环境退化的情况下,获得金融资源的机会有限,这可能会限制资本密集型的长途移民。我们研究地理隔离是否改变了两个主要的环境移民理论的原则。环境稀缺理论认为,环境退化通过促使家庭将劳动力重新分配到新环境来推动移民。相比之下,环境资本理论断言,自然资源可用性的下降限制了移民所需的资本。结果表明,普遍应用的环境稀缺理论不太有效,而环境资本理论在地理隔离地区更具相关性。研究结果表明,地理隔离是出现移民差异的一个重要维度。随着整体环境和经济状况恶化,离较偏远岛屿的外迁可能性增加,而离更孤立岛屿的外迁可能性降低。