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Taken by storm: Hurricanes, migrant networks, and US immigration

By: Mahajan, Parag and Yang, Dean.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Description: 12(2), Apr, 2020: p.250-277. In: American Economic Journal: Applied EconomicsSummary: Do negative shocks in origin countries encourage or inhibit international migration? What roles do networks play in modifying out-migration responses? The answers to these questions are not theoretically obvious, and past empirical findings are equivocal. We examine the impact of hurricanes on a quarter century of international migration to the United States. Hurricanes increase migration to the United States, with the effect's magnitude increasing in the size of prior migrant stocks. We provide new insights into how networks facilitate legal, permanent US immigration in response to origin country shocks, a matter of growing importance as climate change increases natural disaster impacts. - Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
12(2), Apr, 2020: p.250-277 Available AR124420

Do negative shocks in origin countries encourage or inhibit international migration? What roles do networks play in modifying out-migration responses? The answers to these questions are not theoretically obvious, and past empirical findings are equivocal. We examine the impact of hurricanes on a quarter century of international migration to the United States. Hurricanes increase migration to the United States, with the effect's magnitude increasing in the size of prior migrant stocks. We provide new insights into how networks facilitate legal, permanent US immigration in response to origin country shocks, a matter of growing importance as climate change increases natural disaster impacts. - Reproduced

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