Atlas of migration in Northern Central America

Throughout history, international migration has held opportunities for migrants, their families and communities, and the countries involved. However, these —sometimes symbolic— potential gains are often undermined by objective adversities faced by migrants on their travels, at their destinations, du...

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Publicado: ECLAC 2018
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44288
http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44288
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spelling oai:dspace6-d1:11362-44288 Atlas of migration in Northern Central America NU. CEPAL MIGRACION MIGRACION INTERNACIONAL ATLAS ESTADISTICAS DE MIGRACION MIGRATION INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION ATLASES MIGRATION STATISTICS Throughout history, international migration has held opportunities for migrants, their families and communities, and the countries involved. However, these —sometimes symbolic— potential gains are often undermined by objective adversities faced by migrants on their travels, at their destinations, during their return journey and while in transit through intervening territories. Migration from the countries of Northern Central America (NCA), comprising El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, is shaped by economic factors such as wage and production gaps between countries, by natural disasters and by the first impacts of climate change, especially in rural areas. All this intersects with the insecurity and structural violence that have beset these countries for years. Accordingly, the major —and recently increasing— migration flows in NCA countries are the result of a close and complex interaction between lack of options in places of origin and the opportunities differential migrants see between these places and their intended destinations. This document is meant for decision makers, academics, civil society and the wider public with an interest in contemporary migration. It examines the main aspects and salient features of migration from NCA countries using maps, infographics and text, including some references to other countries of the subregion. It considers the main migration destinations, the transit stage and the places from where return migration is initiated: Mexico and the United States. The work draws on a number of sources and studies, particularly those by the Latin American and Caribbean Demographic Centre (CELADE)–Population Division of ECLAC. Foreword .-- Part I. Situation in countries of origin of Northern Central America (NCA) .-- Part II. Hallmarks of migration and migrants .-- Part III. Challenges of migration-related vulnerability in Northern Central America: links with the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration. 2018-12-07T16:24:36Z 2018-12-07T16:24:36Z 2018-12-10 Texto Documento Completo http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44288 LC/PUB.2018/23 en .pdf application/x-mobipocket-ebook application/epub+zip application/pdf AMERICA CENTRAL GUATEMALA HONDURAS EL SALVADOR MEXICO CENTRAL AMERICA GUATEMALA HONDURAS EL SALVADOR MEXICO ECLAC
building Cepal
institution Sistema Integrado de Documentación
collection Libros Digitales Cepal
format Libro en línea
title Atlas of migration in Northern Central America
spellingShingle Atlas of migration in Northern Central America
MIGRACION
MIGRACION INTERNACIONAL
ATLAS
ESTADISTICAS DE MIGRACION
MIGRATION
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
ATLASES
MIGRATION STATISTICS
title_short Atlas of migration in Northern Central America
title_full Atlas of migration in Northern Central America
title_fullStr Atlas of migration in Northern Central America
title_full_unstemmed Atlas of migration in Northern Central America
title_sort atlas of migration in northern central america
topic MIGRACION
MIGRACION INTERNACIONAL
ATLAS
ESTADISTICAS DE MIGRACION
MIGRATION
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
ATLASES
MIGRATION STATISTICS
description Throughout history, international migration has held opportunities for migrants, their families and communities, and the countries involved. However, these —sometimes symbolic— potential gains are often undermined by objective adversities faced by migrants on their travels, at their destinations, during their return journey and while in transit through intervening territories. Migration from the countries of Northern Central America (NCA), comprising El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, is shaped by economic factors such as wage and production gaps between countries, by natural disasters and by the first impacts of climate change, especially in rural areas. All this intersects with the insecurity and structural violence that have beset these countries for years. Accordingly, the major —and recently increasing— migration flows in NCA countries are the result of a close and complex interaction between lack of options in places of origin and the opportunities differential migrants see between these places and their intended destinations. This document is meant for decision makers, academics, civil society and the wider public with an interest in contemporary migration. It examines the main aspects and salient features of migration from NCA countries using maps, infographics and text, including some references to other countries of the subregion. It considers the main migration destinations, the transit stage and the places from where return migration is initiated: Mexico and the United States. The work draws on a number of sources and studies, particularly those by the Latin American and Caribbean Demographic Centre (CELADE)–Population Division of ECLAC.
publisher ECLAC
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44288
http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44288
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