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Environmental Migration As Short- or Long-term Differences from a Trend: A Case Study of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Effects on Out-migration in the Gulf of Mexico

Overview
Journal Int Migr
Date 2024 Aug 7
PMID 39108842
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Abstract

An environmental event that damages housing and the built environment may result in either a short- or long-term out-migration response, depending on residents' recovery decisions and hazard tolerance. If residents move only in the immediate disaster aftermath, then out-migration will be elevated only in the short-term. However, if disasters increase residents' concerns about future risk, heighten vulnerability, or harm the local economy, then out-migration may be elevated for years after an event. The substantive aim of this research brief is to evaluate hypotheses about short- and long-term out-migration responses to the highly destructive 2005 hurricane season in the Gulf of Mexico. The methodological aim is to demonstrate a difference-in-differences (DID) approach analyzing time series data from Gulf Coast counties to compare short- and long-differences in out-migration probabilities in the treatment and control counties. We find a large short-term out-migration response and a smaller sustained increase for the disaster-affected coastal counties.

Citing Articles

The Unequal Impact of Disasters: Assessing the Interplay Between Social Vulnerability, Public Assistance, Flood Insurance, and Migration in the U.S.

Han Y, Ye X, Zhu C Urban Inform. 2024; 3(1):30.

PMID: 39493421 PMC: 11527954. DOI: 10.1007/s44212-024-00061-9.

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