Essential Question: How did environmental and economic factors contribute to patterns of migration between 1750 and 1900?
desire for low-wage labor was linked to exploitation of natural resources
European states recruited new laborers to work on plantations after the abolition of slavery around the world
Indian laborers migrated to British colonies in the Caribbean, South Africa, East Africa, and Fiji
Chinese laborers migrated to California and British Malaya to build railroads and serve as farmhands, gardeners, and domestics
Japanese laborers migrated to Hawaii, Peru, and Cuba to work on sugar plantations
Slavery - most countries in Americas abolished it by 1800s, but it continued with the decline of the institution. In US, enslaved people increased after abolition.
Indentured Servitude - people who worked a set time before becoming free. As a result to their travels, indentured laborers brought their home cultures to their new home lands and altered those lands’ demographics
Asian Contract Laborers - tricked into servitude. Not anyone’s property, but they were substitutes for slaves. Popular in China and India, these workers were sent to colonies
Penal Colonies - overseas settlements used to punish criminals through labor and harsh treatment
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Diaspora - mass emigrations from a country or region that took place over many years. Many were the result of poverty, politics, or famine
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Many people who moved away from Britain went to live in settler colonies, such as Canada, South Africa, Australia, or New Zealand.
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Migration, Transportation, and Urbanization
Many people planned to return to their homelands because of improvements in transportation technology allowing them to do so. Since most industry was located in urban areas, both internal and external migrants often settled in cities, which increased in size and influence.
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Italy to Argentina - pro immigration policies, Argentina offered better wages
Japan to Hawaii - sought financial opportunities on sugar/pineapple plantations
China to US - sought work in gold mines, then farm/factory work, and you could work on the Transcontinental Railroad
Ireland to US - Irish people wanted to escape the Great Famine, sought labor opportunities
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Essential Question: How and why did patterns of migration affect society between 1750 and 1900?
This period was a time of migration from rural areas to urban areas, because the growth of cities offered more opportunities for people in lower classes. The transatlantic slave trade brought millions of enslaved Africans to the Americas, affecting the demographics of the region.
People left their home countries to escape poverty and persecution, leading to a decline in population and a loss of skilled labor. This migration also led to changes in the labor market, as people left traditional occupations to work in the new industries and economies of the Americas. These migrations resulted in a gender imbalance as more men migrated for work or were forced into enslavement.
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