EMS- Human population, page no 178
What are rural and urban areas:
• Urban areas: Urban areas usually refer to cities, suburbs and towns. Urban areas have more development in terms of access to infrastructure and connectivity like airports, ports, railways, housing, roads etc.
• Rural areas: Rural areas usually refer to villages. Rural areas usually don't have much development in terms of infrastructure.
What is push and pull factors:
Push and pull factors in migration according to Everett S. Lee (1917-2007) are categories that demographers use to analyse human migration from former areas to new host locations. Lee's model divides factors causing migrations into two groups of factors: push and pull. Push factors are things that are unfavourable about the home area that one lives in, and pull factors are things that attract one to another host area.
Push from rural to urban:
• Drought/famine.
• Poverty.
• poor links with outside world.
• Poor links with outside world.
• Poor services.
• Work on the land only, subsistence.
• Desertification.
• Sea-level rise.
• Seasonal weather events such as monsoon, cyclones, etc.
Pull from rural to urban:
• Good supplies of foods whatever the weather.
• Well-paid jobs.
• Good rods.
• Hospitals, school, water, electricity.
• Factory, shop, office work for a wage.
• No comparable pull factors.
THE END
can u calculate the ratio of urban and rural areas in this world
How do social and cultural amenities in urban areas act as pull factors?
What impact does rural to urban migration have on the population dynamics of rural areas?
How do natural disasters influence migration patterns between rural and urban areas?
What are some strategies to mitigate the negative effects of rural depopulation?
What environmental factors can push people out of rural areas?