2010
DOI: 10.5539/ass.v6n12p176
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Rural-Urban Migration and Its Consequences on Rural Children: An Empirical Study

Abstract: Rural-urban adult migration, mainly adult male migration makes heavy demand on all family members, but especially on children who are left behind in rural area to shoulder the responsibility of agriculture production and food security. Labor shortage due to rural-urban adult migration may mean that children in rural area often have to face tighter time schedules and patterns of time use and human energy inputs required in agriculture production. The study reveals the impact of rural-urban migration on rural ch… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Table 7 shows that another private cost associated with labour migration is increased workload on children left behind (confirmed by 58.59%). This is consistent with Meerza (2010), Glind (2010), and UNICEF (2010).…”
Section: Social Impacts Of Labour Migrationsupporting
confidence: 88%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Table 7 shows that another private cost associated with labour migration is increased workload on children left behind (confirmed by 58.59%). This is consistent with Meerza (2010), Glind (2010), and UNICEF (2010).…”
Section: Social Impacts Of Labour Migrationsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Also, household head migration increases children's susceptibility to child labour (Glind, 2010). Labour migration, especially adult male migration, leaves heavy responsibilities on family members, including children, left behind to bear the burden in agricultural production (Meerza, 2010). Though children left behind may receive remittances, they may lack the necessary parental care (D'Emilio et al, 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rural-urban migration is not only a Bhutanese phenomenon; it has been reported in most rural regions around the world due to better economic opportunities elsewhere, causing damage to rural communities in terms of skewed demographic profiles, reductions in services and loss of local culture (Stockdale 2004). Rural out-migration is becoming common in most Asian countries, where the exit of younger family members is leaving more labour burdens on elderly people and children in rural areas, leading to rise in child farm labour (Meerza 2010). The present scenario highlights the need to consider introducing better rural schemes and opportunities to retain rural youth and encourage yak farming.…”
Section: Farming Preference and Future Of Yak Farmingmentioning
confidence: 99%