Home is where the money goes:: migration- related urban - rural integration in delta regions
Home is where the money goes:: migration- related urban - rural integration in delta regions
The dominant movement of people in the mega-deltas of Asia is from agriculture-dominated rural areas to urban settlements, driven by growing opportunities, but resulting in new human development challenges. In this context, the present study aims to investigate whether remittance income leads to enhanced multiple dimensions of well-being in sending areas in deltas, by focusing on two delta regions with significant out-migration rates, Bangladeshi Ganges Brahmaputra and the Vietnamese Mekong deltas. The paper develops a conceptual framework that draws on existing migration theories and the aspirations and capabilities theories. Data from large scale sample household surveys (2010 Bangladesh Household Income and Expenditure Survey and 2012 Vietnam Living Standards Survey) are analysed through multilevel regression modelling to examine well-being outcomes in sending areas and links to remittance income. The results show that the temporal extent of internal and international migration is positively associated with remittances in both delta regions. The results also suggest that in both delta regions remittances have a significant positive effect on household well-being in the source rural areas, including overall income, investments in health, food security and access to sanitation. The study concludes that landscapes of urban and rural deltas are increasingly economically integrated which suggests greater resilience even for environmentally-at-risk tropical deltas.
Szabo, Sylvia
ff6551ac-faf1-40ce-83ea-bd003b0fc45d
Adger, W. Neil
880deff5-3dde-429f-9b50-4366c54bcfe7
Matthews, Zoe
ebaee878-8cb8-415f-8aa1-3af2c3856f55
4 January 2018
Szabo, Sylvia
ff6551ac-faf1-40ce-83ea-bd003b0fc45d
Adger, W. Neil
880deff5-3dde-429f-9b50-4366c54bcfe7
Matthews, Zoe
ebaee878-8cb8-415f-8aa1-3af2c3856f55
Szabo, Sylvia, Adger, W. Neil and Matthews, Zoe
(2018)
Home is where the money goes:: migration- related urban - rural integration in delta regions.
Migration and Development.
(doi:10.1080/21632324.2017.1374506).
Abstract
The dominant movement of people in the mega-deltas of Asia is from agriculture-dominated rural areas to urban settlements, driven by growing opportunities, but resulting in new human development challenges. In this context, the present study aims to investigate whether remittance income leads to enhanced multiple dimensions of well-being in sending areas in deltas, by focusing on two delta regions with significant out-migration rates, Bangladeshi Ganges Brahmaputra and the Vietnamese Mekong deltas. The paper develops a conceptual framework that draws on existing migration theories and the aspirations and capabilities theories. Data from large scale sample household surveys (2010 Bangladesh Household Income and Expenditure Survey and 2012 Vietnam Living Standards Survey) are analysed through multilevel regression modelling to examine well-being outcomes in sending areas and links to remittance income. The results show that the temporal extent of internal and international migration is positively associated with remittances in both delta regions. The results also suggest that in both delta regions remittances have a significant positive effect on household well-being in the source rural areas, including overall income, investments in health, food security and access to sanitation. The study concludes that landscapes of urban and rural deltas are increasingly economically integrated which suggests greater resilience even for environmentally-at-risk tropical deltas.
Text
22_03_2018_Home is wh
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 29 August 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 January 2018
Published date: 4 January 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 418797
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/418797
ISSN: 2163-2324
PURE UUID: 6976d76c-3e0e-478e-9160-e21076f6f1cb
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 22 Mar 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:47
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Sylvia Szabo
Author:
W. Neil Adger
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics