AMSCO 6.6 Causes of Migration in an Interconnected World Notes
1 min read•june 18, 2024
AMSCO 6.6 Causes of Migration in an Interconnected World Notes
📍Topic 6.6 Causes of Migration in an Interconnected World
📖 AMSCO p.417 - p.425
Main Idea
Key Timeline
Image Courtesy of Sameeha
Things to Know
Migration Through Labor Systems
Slavery:
Other than the United States, Cuba, and Brazil, most countries in the Americas had abolished slavery in the early 19th century.
The decrease in slave trade, however, resulted into insufficient amount of laborers so imperial powers looked to other labor systems.
Indentured Servitude
This was often used to afford transportation from poor areas to one with more opportunities
Also used as a way to pay back debt
Although some planned to return to their home countries after making money, many indentured servants stayed in their new countries which led to forming communities and spreading their home culture
Ex: Trinidad, Fiji, Mauritius
Asian Contract Laborers
Chinese and Indian workers were either forced or tricked into labor
Hard conditions and subsistence wages was all part of their exploitation
Media finally brought these conditions to light, criticizing the system as a substitute for slavery
Britain, United States, and Portugal later outlawed it, as well as Cuba.
British Penal Colonies
Established in the late 1700s in Australia, after losing the one in Georgia due to American Revolution
Convicts, from all over Great Britain and India, performed hard labor for free settlers and worked on government public projects, such as the building of infrastructure
Majority of convicts earned their freedom after a set number of years
Many were unable to return because
(a) they were not permitted to as well as because
(b) transportation was much too expensive
Ended in 1850
French Penal Colonies
Had penal colonies in New Caledonia, Africa, and French Guiana
Notorious for harsh treatment of convicts
Ended the transport of convicts in 1938 but Devil Island’s convicts were held until 1953
Migration In the Face of Challenges
India
The primary reason Indian migrants moved was due to widespread poverty in India
They worked on plantations on multiple British colonies such as Dutch Guiana, Fiji, and the Caribbean
Many would renew their contracts or buy a piece of land to permanently farm off of rather than return to home countries
Over 1.5 Million Indians shipped to colonies in Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and Oceania
China
Chinese diaspora began with the gold rush in the mid-19th century, but most Chinese migrants were not involved in mining.
They were instrumental in the building of the US Transcontinental Railroad.
Some Chinese also came as indentured servants and most were males who planned to return to China
Many people left due to the chaos and famine caused by the Taiping Rebellion
In the late 18th century, Chinese began to emigrate to Southeast Asia but the major wave of migration began after the first Opium War in the mid-19th century, which made it easier for Chinese migrants to leave
Ireland
Some left for political reasons - Britain abolished the Irish Parliament after Ireland joined the UK
Some left due to religious discrimination against Catholics or Protestant dissenters
The Great Famine led to around 3 million Irish emigrants mainly to the Americas, as well as to England, Scotland, Canada, and Australia
Emigration continued even after Famine
Italy
Emigration began with unification of Italy in 1861 until 1900
Many went to countries in Europe, New Zealand, Australia and North and South America
The main reason behind people migrating was poverty - those who left were workers with traditional skills and farmers who were unable to make a living
Others left for economic and political reasons, and would send money back, encouraging further emigration
Migration to Settler Colonies
Technical Experts
Many engineers and geologists migrated to South Asia and Africa, creating a type of diaspora
Engineers spread Western science and technology through the world, while also using their knowledge with the experience of colonial land’s engineers
Western and colonial engineers worked together on public and private industrial projects
Argentina
Part of Britain’s “informal empire” and got more investments than India
British settlers in Argentina were mainly businessman, traders, bankers, and engineers
As a result, they founded banks, developed agricultural export trades, built infrastructure, and imported luxuries
This greatly improved the quality of life in Argentina and grew its middle class
Japan
Prior to the 1868 Meiji Restoration, Japan was closed off to the rest of the world.
In 1893, Japan’s government established the Colonization Society
Many Japanese went to Peru for contract work and to coastal United States cities for education, like San Francisco, Portland, and Seattle.
Migration, Transportation, and Urbanization
Technological innovations allowed some who migrated to return or visit their home countries
Agreements such as the one between Hawaii and Japan, were three-year contracts allowing settlers to go back
Italian workers had a similar agreement with Argentina, but many chose to remain and settle
Most domestic and international migrants settled in urban areas as they had the most industry jobs.
This increased the size and international influence of these cities
Terms to Remember
Term
Definition + Significance
Indentured Servitude
A system in which people worked on lands for a set number of years to pay off debt for their passage before being set free.
Penal Colony
A settlement where convicts are exiled, used to separate them from the general population
Diaspora
A mass emigration from a country or region for a period of many years
Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864)
A Civil War between the Qing dynasty and Taiping Kingdom
Emigrate
When people leave one’s country to go to another
The Great Famine (1845-1849)
Potato crop was destroyed, which was a main food source, leading to Faine
Colonial Service
Government officials who administered British possessions overseas
Colonization Society
Japanese governments established group to export Japan’s large population and commercial goods
Meiji Restoration (1869)
The loss of power of the Tokugawa Shogunate and the rise to supreme rule of the Emperor
Convicts
Individuals found guilty of a crime or offense and serving a sentence of imprisonment