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Migration as a feature of land system transitions

Radel, Claudia | Jokisch, Brad D [autor/a] | Schmook, Birgit Inge [autor/a] | Carte, Lindsey [autor/a] | Aguilar Støen, Mariel [autor/a] | Hermans, Kathleen [autor/a] | Zimmerer, Karl S [autor/a] | Aldrich, Stephen [autor/a].
Tipo de material: Artículo
 en línea Artículo en línea Tema(s): Migración | Cambio de uso de la tierra | Cambio climáticoTema(s) en inglés: Migration | Land use change | Climate changeDescriptor(es) geográficos: América Latina Nota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso En: Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability. volumen 38 (June 2019), páginas 103-110. --ISSN: 1877-3435Número de sistema: 59450Resumen:
Inglés

Human migration to and from rural areas is so prominent and persistent globally that land system science must understand how the movement of people is integral to land system transitions both at the origin of migration and at its destination. With a focus on Latin America, we review research on how land change affects migration and how migration affects land systems, to demonstrate that the relationship is complex and context-specific. Various types of migration evidence the challenges of managing land for multiple goals and the needs of diverse groups. A perspective that connects land change in multiple locations is needed. In particular, concepts of telecoupling and translocality can help to further understanding of how globalized economic systems link changes across distant places and capture the economic and non-economic processes that accompany migration and shape land change in multiple, connected locations. Land systems research must anticipate that migration will continue to contribute to complex land systems with multiple users and goals.

Recurso en línea: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877343518301350
Lista(s) en las que aparece este ítem: Birgit Inge Schmook
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Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso

Human migration to and from rural areas is so prominent and persistent globally that land system science must understand how the movement of people is integral to land system transitions both at the origin of migration and at its destination. With a focus on Latin America, we review research on how land change affects migration and how migration affects land systems, to demonstrate that the relationship is complex and context-specific. Various types of migration evidence the challenges of managing land for multiple goals and the needs of diverse groups. A perspective that connects land change in multiple locations is needed. In particular, concepts of telecoupling and translocality can help to further understanding of how globalized economic systems link changes across distant places and capture the economic and non-economic processes that accompany migration and shape land change in multiple, connected locations. Land systems research must anticipate that migration will continue to contribute to complex land systems with multiple users and goals. eng

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