2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.jue.2006.04.005
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Climatic change and rural–urban migration: The case of sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract: We investigate the role that climatic change has played in the pattern of urbanization in sub-Saharan African countries compared to the rest of the developing world. To this end we assemble a cross-country panel data set that allows us to estimate the determinants of urbanization. The results of our econometric analysis suggest that climatic change, as proxied by rainfall, has acted to change urbanization in sub-Saharan Africa but not elsewhere in the developing world. Moreover, this link has become stronger s… Show more

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Cited by 468 publications
(329 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
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“…Starting from the baseline assumption that migration can be considered a risk-coping strategy to climatic shocks, they find that in rural Tanzania a 1% reduction in agricultural income induced by weather shocks increases the probability of migration by 13 percentage points, on average, within the following year. Similar results can also be found in [57].…”
Section: Climate Shocks and Internal Migrationsupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Starting from the baseline assumption that migration can be considered a risk-coping strategy to climatic shocks, they find that in rural Tanzania a 1% reduction in agricultural income induced by weather shocks increases the probability of migration by 13 percentage points, on average, within the following year. Similar results can also be found in [57].…”
Section: Climate Shocks and Internal Migrationsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Most of the literature discussing internal migration highlights that a reduction in precipitations may cause an increase in urban migration, for example in sub-Saharan Africa [57], or, more generally, an increase in internal migration, as in the cases of Mali, Burkina Faso, and Tanzania, respectively analyzed by [58][59][60]. As underlined by [61], the most frequent migration pattern is that occurring between rural areas.…”
Section: Climate Shocks and Internal Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The impact of climate change on migration is not well-understood either (Barrios et al 2006;Bates 2002;Kuentzel and Ramaswamy 2005;Reuveny 2007). Relationships are much more complex than in the case of energy demand, but an improved synthesis would increase our confidence in the estimates of the social cost of carbon.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jónsson (2010), for example, offers a review of the environmental factor in migration dynamics across 13 case studies in the Sahel region. Barrios, Bertinelli, and Strobl (2006) also explore the influence that climatic changes might have had in shaping the pattern of urbanization in sub-Saharan countries compared to the rest of the developing world. Numerous authors have also explored more in-depth environment-migration dynamics in more restricted geographical regions, such as the work of Henry, Schoumaker, and Beauchemin (2004) and Konseiga (2006) in Burkina Faso.…”
Section: Livelihoods and Migration In The Kilimanjaro Region Of Tanzaniamentioning
confidence: 99%