1. World problems
  2. Excessive population mobility

Excessive population mobility

  • Rootlessness
  • Inadequate sense of social-cultural context
  • Absence of socializing systems
  • Disturbing transient mobility
  • Rapid transient flux
  • Temporary resident patterns

Incidence

Connected with bad housing, both as cause and effect, is the shiftlessness of a large proportion of many new urban populations. Where housing conditions are unsuited to family life, the worker is discouraged from bringing his family into the industrial area; he does not feel permanently settled in the area of his place of work and remains tied to his former community. Even when there are housing opportunities, industrial workers of peasant origin often fail to become integrated and assimilated into modern urban society and the stream of urban life; instead they tend to form a sub-culture of low status, living separately in special quarters and pursuing a mode of life that is half urban, half rural.

Claim

Increasingly cities and suburbs are made of newcomers, many of which perceive their residence at any particular location to be temporary. Status is in some countries associated less with the amount of time that a person has been resident in a community and more with the frequency with which that person has moved to a new community (provided that such movement can be associated with upward mobility). Few families therefore have roots in suburban towns; many assume that they, or their children, will move to some other location. Many families are in consequence the residue of nuclear families, since the children or the parents tend to live elsewhere. Many such communities are consequently unable to build a stable social structure, especially one capable of assisting those in need.

Counter-claim

It is the mover – the restless, never-satisfied, status-seeking consumer – who has been the backbone of a number of successful industrial economies, notably in North America. Such mobility is not only a result of national wealth but a basic cause of it. The fierce desire for self-betterment creates a market for business and catalyzes a prosperity which would otherwise appear improbable.

Broader

Narrower

Aggravates

Deculturation
Excellent
Family breakdown
Presentable

Aggravated by

Displaced people
Presentable

Reduces

Reduced by

Strategy

Value

Rootlessness
Yet to rate
Absence
Yet to rate
Inadequacy
Yet to rate
Transience
Yet to rate
Excess
Yet to rate

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #1: No PovertySustainable Development Goal #10: Reduced InequalitySustainable Development Goal #11: Sustainable Cities and CommunitiesSustainable Development Goal #16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(C) Cross-sectoral problems
Subject
  • Amenities » Housing, tenants
  • Consciousness » Consciousness
  • Culture » Culture
  • Cybernetics » Systems
  • Design » Patterns
  • Fundamental sciences » Electromagnetism
  • Recreation » Celebration
  • Societal problems » Deprivation
  • Societal problems » Inadequacy
  • Society » Social
  • Sociology » Population
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Nov 22, 2022