Soil Quality and Human Migration in Kenya and Uganda
Journal Article
Gray, Clark L.
2011
Global Environmental Change
21
2
421-30
20110315
10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2011.02.004
PMC3194045
5138
Soil degradation is widely considered to be a key factor undermining agricultural livelihoods in the developing world and contributing to rural out-migration. To date, however, few quantitative studies have examined the effects of soil characteristics on human migration or other social outcomes for potentially vulnerable households. This study takes advantage of a unique longitudinal survey dataset from Kenya and Uganda containing information on household-level soil properties to investigate the effects of soil quality on population mobility. Random effects multinomial logit models are used to test for effects of soil quality on both temporary and permanent migration while accounting for a variety of potential confounders. The analysis reveals that soil quality significantly reduces migration in Kenya, particularly for temporary labor migration, but marginally increases migration in Uganda. These findings are consistent with several previous studies in showing that adverse environmental conditions tend to increase migration but not universally, contrary to common assumptions about environmentally-induced migration.
Population Movement, Diversity, Inequality
Population and Environment
5138.ris
—
Octet Stream,
1 kB (1,538 bytes)


