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Article
Mexican Male Transnational Migration and its Linkages to Land-Use Change in a SOuthern Campeche Ejido
Journal of Latin American Geography (2008)
  • Claudia Radel
Abstract
This paper describes findings of a case study examining linkages between emerging transnational migration patterns and land-use transformations in an ejido in the southern part of Mexico’s Campeche state. Qualitative data were derived via in-depth interviews of a stratified random sample of 26 households. The ejido’s experience illustrates the linkages between migration and land-use change at an early stage in a community’s migration experience. Prior cash cropping of chili, leading to accumulation of relative wealth for certain households, facilitated the initiation of migration; while recent chili cultivation failures have motivated it. Early migration, in turn, is associated with an increase in investment in certain agricultural inputs and a decrease in the rate of chili cultivation, with implications for deforestation and forest recovery.
Publication Date
2008
Citation Information
Claudia Radel. "Mexican Male Transnational Migration and its Linkages to Land-Use Change in a SOuthern Campeche Ejido" Journal of Latin American Geography Vol. 7 Iss. 2 (2008) p. 59 - 84
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/claudia_radel/53/