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Is mass global migration the new normal?

27 May 20190 comments

Large scale global migration is set to increase dramatically in the coming decades bringing with it more political division and risk of conflict, a disturbing new study has found.

Researchers at Stanford University, in the US, predict that populations are set to explode in sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, and Central America in coming years.

They say the working-age population of sub-Saharan Africa alone is expected to increase by nearly a billion people between 2020 and 2060.

Lead researcher Professor Jack Goldstone says that over time, we’re likely to see “regional demographic explosions of young people.”

In coming decades, overcrowding in these places will exacerbate desertification, water shortages, and urbanisation and mounting ecological stresses will provoke violent political conflict, forcing more people to hit the road in search of a better life, the researchers say.

The study comes as the accelerating cross-border flow of migrants fleeing violence and poverty has remade the politics of Europe and the United States.

The Stanford study warns that the conflicts we’ve seen to date may just be the opening act of a much larger and more dangerous drama.

The research points to the 2007-2008 drought in Syria which wiped out the livelihoods of huge numbers of Syrians living in the countryside, forcing them into already overcrowded cities.

It argues this forced internal migration and created stresses that combined with existing problems to create social unrest, a harsh government crackdown, and then a civil war.

The war created an exodus of millions of desperate Syrians toward neighbouring countries and then to Europe, where more than one million of them landed in 2015, the study argues.

This wave of refugees, joined by migrants from other places, sparked intense fear and hostility among some in Europe, creating opportunities for politicians to win support with vows to stop the flow, the researchers say.

“That’s a major reason why xenophobic populism has become Europe’s fastest-growing political phenomenon,” they say.

In 2014–2018, an unusually severe drought hit Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. Years of erratic weather, failed harvests, and a chronic lack of jobs decimated entire villages in all three countries and created strong incentives for migrants to try to reach the United States, the researchers point out.

They say the arrival of these migrants at the US’ southern border further polarised the politics of a country already divided over immigration, racial tensions, and lost manufacturing jobs.

But the researchers say the situation is not irretrievable.

“Good government, in both poor and rich countries, can help avoid this risk. If poor countries invest more in education, they can create jobs and other opportunities that persuade many more people they can build a safe and prosperous future, for themselves and their families, where they are,” they say.

And, it’s in the interest of rich countries to help. Governments of rich and poor countries can work together much more effectively to slow the advance of climate change. If they do, say the study’s authors, both sides will benefit.

Read the full report here: https://www.hoover.org/research/how-will-demographic-transformations-affect-democracy-coming-decades?utm_source=Fareed%27s+Global+Briefing&utm_campaign=3e6af6e493-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_05_13_09_09&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_6f2e93382a-3e6af6e493-84041237