Natural disasters and population mobility in Bangladesh
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · International Food Policy Research Institute
Abstract
The consequences of environmental change for human migration have gained increasing attention in the context of climate change and recent large-scale natural disasters, but as yet relatively few large-scale and quantitative studies have addressed this issue. We investigate the consequences of climate-related natural disasters for long-term population mobility in rural Bangladesh, a region particularly vulnerable to environmental change, using longitudinal survey data from 1,700 households spanning a 15-y period. Multivariate event history models are used to estimate the effects of flooding and crop failures on local population mobility and long-distance migration while controlling for a large set of potential…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 66.20
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 59
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Flooding (psychology)
- Natural disaster
- Context (archaeology)
- Geography
- Climate change
- Population
- Scale (ratio)
- Environmental resource management