Reluctant Emigrants: The Role of Migration in Papago Indian Adaptation
- 1 June 1972
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Human Organization
- Vol. 31 (2) , 171-186
- https://doi.org/10.17730/humo.31.2.8154ut347v506357
Abstract
The results of a sample survey of migration conducted in three districts of the Papago Indian Reservation are reported. The study measured the composition and destination of the migrant stream and estimated rates for the various aspects of the process. It was intended to determine whether migration was essentially (1) temporary and circular, intended to conserve reservation community life through importing external economic resources, or (2) permanent and linear, intended to facilitate participation in the modernization process at the expense of functional impairment to reservation society.The survey established the following: (1) the probability that any individual will become a permanent emigrant is .49, and .31 that he will leave the Papago Indian Reservation; (2) the age of departure for migrants is 19-24; (3) urban destinations are more desirable than rural; (4) females are more apt to migrate than males; (5) equal numbers of migrants leave as individuals and as members of kin groups; (6) economic mo...Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Epidemiologic Studies of Papago Indian MortalityHuman Organization, 1972
- The Parameters of an Ethnic Group: A Method for Studying the Total TribeAmerican Anthropologist, 1967
- A theory of migrationDemography, 1966