Literature DB >> 29118460

Migration in the 1930s: Beyond the Dust Bowl.

Myron P Gutmann1, Daniel Brown2, Angela R Cunningham3, James Dykes4, Susan Hautaniemi Leonard5, Jani Little4, Jeremy Mikecz6, Paul W Rhode7, Seth Spielman8, Kenneth M Sylvester9.   

Abstract

This paper analyzes in detail the role of environmental and economic shocks in the migration of the 1930s. The 1940 U.S. Census of Population asked every inhabitant where they lived five years earlier, a unique source for understanding migration flows and networks. Earlier research documented migrant origins and destinations, but we will show how short term and annual weather conditions at sending locations in the 1930s explain those flows, and how they operated through agricultural success. Beyond demographic data, we use data about temperature and precipitation, plus data about agricultural production from the agricultural census. The widely known migration literature for the 1930s describes an era of relatively low migration, with much of the migration that did occur outward from the Dust Bowl region and the cotton South. Our work about the complete U.S. will provide a fuller examination of migration in this socially and economically important era.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 29118460      PMCID: PMC5673135          DOI: 10.1017/ssh.2016.28

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Hist        ISSN: 0145-5532


  4 in total

1.  Social structure, household strategies, and the cumulative causation of migration.

Authors:  D S Massey
Journal:  Popul Index       Date:  1990

2.  COPING WITH ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL SHOCKS: INSTITUTIONS AND OUTCOMES: Moving to Higher Ground: Migration Response to Natural Disasters in the Early Twentieth Century.

Authors:  Leah Platt Boustan; Matthew E Kahn; Paul W Rhode
Journal:  Am Econ Rev       Date:  2012-05

3.  Race, gender, and marriage: destination selection during the Great Migration.

Authors:  Katherine J Curtis White; Kyle Crowder; Stewart E Tolnay; Robert M Adelman
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2005-05

4.  Recovery Migration to the City of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina: A Migration Systems Approach.

Authors:  Elizabeth Fussell; Katherine J Curtis; Jack Dewaard
Journal:  Popul Environ       Date:  2014-03-01
  4 in total
  4 in total

1.  A spatial evaluation of historic iron mining impacts on current impaired waters in Lake Superior's Mesabi Range.

Authors:  John Baeten; Nancy Langston; Don Lafreniere
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2017-10-05       Impact factor: 5.129

2.  "Big data" in economic history.

Authors:  Myron P Gutmann; Emily Klancher Merchant; Evan Roberts
Journal:  J Econ Hist       Date:  2018-04-03

3.  Redlines and Greenspace: The Relationship between Historical Redlining and 2010 Greenspace across the United States.

Authors:  Anthony Nardone; Kara E Rudolph; Rachel Morello-Frosch; Joan A Casey
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2021-01-27       Impact factor: 9.031

4.  Ocean and land forcing of the record-breaking Dust Bowl heatwaves across central United States.

Authors:  Tim Cowan; Gabriele C Hegerl; Andrew Schurer; Simon F B Tett; Robert Vautard; Pascal Yiou; Aglaé Jézéquel; Friederike E L Otto; Luke J Harrington; Benjamin Ng
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 14.919

  4 in total

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