美国大干旱期间的移民与种族差异(1935-1940)

Environmental migration and race during the Great American Drought, 1935–1940

American Journal of Agricultural Economics · 2025
被引 0
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

研究1930年代美国干旱期间,黑人与白人在内部移民反应上的种族差异,发现黑人更易因干旱迁移,且联邦救济政策放大了这一差异。

Abstract

Abstract We study racial differences in internal migration responses to one of the most severe climatic shocks in US history—the drought of the 1930s. Using data from the 1940 census on 70 million adults, we find that individuals exposed to more severe drought between 1935 and 1940 were more likely to make an inter‐county move and that this responsiveness was greater for Black individuals than White individuals. This racial difference was particularly pronounced among the rural population. Black individuals' migration premium came despite their systematic disadvantage in the economy of the 1930s and evidence along dimensions other than race that disadvantage limited individuals' ability to adapt to the drought through migration. Federal relief spending under the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) magnified this racial difference, reducing the migration response to drought for White individuals and increasing it for Black individuals. These results help to better understand how the reactions of different groups aggregate to determine the magnitude and composition of migration responses to natural disasters, as well as the roles of migration and government policy in disadvantaged groups' responses to natural disasters.

年代干旱环境移民种族差异农业调整法案