{"title":"十九世纪意大利和西班牙大规模移民的社会和人口先决条件","authors":"N. Kudeyarova","doi":"10.31857/s013038640020660-4","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In this study the author analyses the causes of mass emigration from Southern Europe in the nineteenth century, which had a profound influence on the formation of the modern composition of the population of several Latin American countries. The study is based on the push/pull migration model proposed by Everett S. Lee, as well as on the model of interrelation of migration and employment diversification by sector of economic activity developed by Gustavo Cabrera, where the mono-industry specialisation of employment in a region stimulates the population outflow. Despite slow demographic growth, lagging industrialisation in Italy and Spain could not cope with the surplus labour force that emerged in the agrarian regions. The gap between the agrarian South and the industrialising North, characteristic of these two countries, had an important impact on the formation of internal mobility. Political upheavals – the unification of Italy, the dynastic confrontation in Spain – also increased the outflow of population. Unresolved agrarian issues, population growth and lagging modernisation increased the push-factor effect. The author notes the structural similarity of the internal causes of mass migration but, on the basis of statistical data, emphasises the geographical diversity of the resettlement areas chosen. The collapse of the Spanish Empire brought an end to the colonial type of migration, which had its greatest impact on the situation in Cuba in the period indicated. Further dynamics were determined by the socio-economic motivations and policies of the host countries, especially in Latin America and the USA, where migrants found new opportunities.","PeriodicalId":82203,"journal":{"name":"Novaia i noveishaia istoriia","volume":"34 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Social and Demographic Prerequisites for Mass Migration in Italy and Spain in the XIX Century\",\"authors\":\"N. Kudeyarova\",\"doi\":\"10.31857/s013038640020660-4\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"In this study the author analyses the causes of mass emigration from Southern Europe in the nineteenth century, which had a profound influence on the formation of the modern composition of the population of several Latin American countries. The study is based on the push/pull migration model proposed by Everett S. Lee, as well as on the model of interrelation of migration and employment diversification by sector of economic activity developed by Gustavo Cabrera, where the mono-industry specialisation of employment in a region stimulates the population outflow. Despite slow demographic growth, lagging industrialisation in Italy and Spain could not cope with the surplus labour force that emerged in the agrarian regions. The gap between the agrarian South and the industrialising North, characteristic of these two countries, had an important impact on the formation of internal mobility. Political upheavals – the unification of Italy, the dynastic confrontation in Spain – also increased the outflow of population. Unresolved agrarian issues, population growth and lagging modernisation increased the push-factor effect. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在这项研究中,作者分析了19世纪南欧大规模移民的原因,这对几个拉丁美洲国家现代人口构成的形成产生了深远的影响。本研究基于Everett S. Lee提出的推/拉迁移模型,以及Gustavo Cabrera提出的按经济活动部门划分的迁移与就业多样化相互关系模型,该模型认为一个地区的单一行业的就业专业化刺激了人口外流。尽管人口增长缓慢,但意大利和西班牙落后的工业化进程无法应对农业地区出现的过剩劳动力。作为这两个国家的特征,农业南方和工业化北方之间的差距对内部流动的形成产生了重要影响。政治动荡——意大利的统一,西班牙的王朝对抗——也增加了人口的外流。未解决的土地问题、人口增长和落后的现代化增加了推动因素效应。作者指出,大规模移徙的内部原因在结构上是相似的,但根据统计数据,强调所选择的重新安置地区在地理上是不同的。西班牙帝国的崩溃结束了殖民式的移徙,这种移徙在本报告所述期间对古巴局势的影响最大。进一步的动态是由东道国的社会经济动机和政策决定的,特别是在移徙者找到新机会的拉丁美洲和美国。
Social and Demographic Prerequisites for Mass Migration in Italy and Spain in the XIX Century
In this study the author analyses the causes of mass emigration from Southern Europe in the nineteenth century, which had a profound influence on the formation of the modern composition of the population of several Latin American countries. The study is based on the push/pull migration model proposed by Everett S. Lee, as well as on the model of interrelation of migration and employment diversification by sector of economic activity developed by Gustavo Cabrera, where the mono-industry specialisation of employment in a region stimulates the population outflow. Despite slow demographic growth, lagging industrialisation in Italy and Spain could not cope with the surplus labour force that emerged in the agrarian regions. The gap between the agrarian South and the industrialising North, characteristic of these two countries, had an important impact on the formation of internal mobility. Political upheavals – the unification of Italy, the dynastic confrontation in Spain – also increased the outflow of population. Unresolved agrarian issues, population growth and lagging modernisation increased the push-factor effect. The author notes the structural similarity of the internal causes of mass migration but, on the basis of statistical data, emphasises the geographical diversity of the resettlement areas chosen. The collapse of the Spanish Empire brought an end to the colonial type of migration, which had its greatest impact on the situation in Cuba in the period indicated. Further dynamics were determined by the socio-economic motivations and policies of the host countries, especially in Latin America and the USA, where migrants found new opportunities.