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1. How has the demography of the world been influenced by long term migration?
1.1 Colonisation and slavery played an important role to give the world population its present features.
Slavery can be regarded as a form of forced migration , to put it mildly. Although slavery was already known in Biblical times, the four centuries between 1450 and 1850 were notorious for large scale slavery in the previous millennium. The Arabs, British, Dutch, Portuguese, Spaniards, French and Danish bought slaves, mostly in Africa, but also in the East, and sold some of them in Europe, but they were mostly intended for the new colonies occupied by European countries.
These colonies refer to newly discovered (for Europeans) territories that fell into the hands of European nations between 1500 and 1900, by means of treaties, annexation or war. The fact that European languages such as Spanish and English, and to a lesser degree French, are spoken all over the world today, is a result of colonisation. North America, South America, Africa, extensive parts of Asia, Australia and New Zealand were “divided” among the European nations.
The results of the practice of colonialism and slavery is not difficult to see today.
2.2 Contemporary migration patterns
You have already learnt that many Western nations, such as Germany and the Scandinavian countries, have “old” or “ageing” populations. These countries often have problems getting enough workers (on all levels). Also countries with a particularly high economic growth sometimes need skilled and unskilled labour to maintain this growth. On the other hand, people from rapidly growing populations with a “dead” economy, pursue success in other countries. Contemporary migration patterns are therefore mostly determined by economic considerations.
Apart from the fact that not many German youths are presently joining the labour force, Germans have for the past few decades not been particularly fond of manual labour. To address the shortage of workers, thousands of people from “poor” countries were allowed to take on jobs in Germany. In due course they were joined by their families, so that Turkish descendants today make up a considerable percentage of the German population. Apart from the German language, Turkish is the language spoken most by Germany’s permanent citizens.
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