29 comments

  • nobrains an hour ago

    Why has , recently, Pakistan been seen added more and more to a new category "MENAP" and separate from South Asia (i.e. India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh) ?

    These classifications should be geographic and could even racial, but it seems this new classification (MENAP) seems more "religious"

    • ricardobeat 34 minutes ago

      Pakistan being “south asia” makes about as much sense as Turkey and Saudi Arabia being labeled “west asia”. Technically correct, odd choice for modern communication.

    • kdheiwns 41 minutes ago

      In America at least, all the hot deserty places between Europe and India=Middle East. I only started hearing the term "South Asia" to refer to places like Pakistan after encountering more non-Americans online. Afghanistan is also considered as part of the Middle East to basically every average American (hence why it's lumped in with all those "Middle Eastern wars"), but I'm not sure if it's seen that way in other areas.

    • bcjdjsndon 20 minutes ago

      Bangladesh is Muslim though

  • mettamage 2 hours ago

    As the article points out. The researcher’s site has an exploratory tool to view the data [1].

    [1] https://www.socsc.hku.hk/rhps/global-migration/

    • gadders 9 minutes ago

      If you pick 2023/2024 and the UK, you can see the disaster that is the Boris Wave.

  • swiftcoder an hour ago

    Fascinating to see that MENA is a net positive on migration. There's often a lot of rhetoric around MENA migration to Europe and North America, but you hear much less about migration to MENA countries.

    • pjc50 28 minutes ago

      The Gulf states take in a lot of migrant workers, who have basically no labour rights there.

      https://www.ilo.org/regions-and-countries/arab-states/united...

      "The UAE hosts some 8.7 million migrant workers – equivalent to over 80 per cent of the country’s resident population – making it one of the largest foreign labour-receiving countries in the world. With Emirati nationals mainly employed in the public sector, migrant workers constitute the bulk of private sector employment"

    • Cthulhu_ 34 minutes ago

      I think people underestimate how many people move back to their home country once they have a better chance (through e.g. education or money) and / or when the situation there improves (e.g. stability). It's why I don't understand why the anti-immigration parties don't do more internationally to help other countries.

    • nirav72 12 minutes ago

      Isn't migration to MENA - specifically migration to North Africa mainly from Sub-Saharan part of Africa?

  • Supernaut an hour ago

    Further down the page, there's a link to an article from a couple of years ago, titled "Migration isn’t increasing".

    So which is it?

    • swiftcoder 26 minutes ago

      There's a quote from one of the study authors:

        "Because previous estimation methods relied on coarse five-year snapshots, 
         they yielded very few data points and created the impression that the rate 
         of global migration flows was stable," adds co-author Guy Abel, a research 
         scholar in the Migration and Sustainable Development Research Group of the 
         IIASA Population and Just Societies Program and professor at the University 
         of Hong Kong. "Our annual data provides a clearer picture, revealing that 
         this rate has actually risen since 2000. This upward trend appears to be 
         driven by long-term demographic shifts and economic development rather than 
         sudden, isolated crises."
      
      So if I'm following correctly, when you look at coarse data, you miss a lot of the smaller-scale migration, and that small-scale migration pushes the totals up a lot?
      • bcjdjsndon 16 minutes ago

        Their dataset is so pathetically small you can't infer anything from it. There are still people alive from the India/Pakistan migration in 48 and that would be number one on this list

  • ricardobeat 39 minutes ago

    Interesting how South America, with several countries made up majorly of immigrants, receives almost no new migrants now.

    Meanwhile the middle-east population is fleeing and being replaced with asians?

    • Cthulhu_ 36 minutes ago

      "fleeing" and "replaced" are loaded terms, I don't think you can derive that from this data. That said, there's a lot of workers being imported from Asia to the middle-east for their ambitious construction projects, could that explain it?

    • bcjdjsndon 18 minutes ago

      > Meanwhile the middle-east population is fleeing and being replaced with asians?

      Persians brought Hinduism to India, so maybe they're returning the favour

  • bcjdjsndon 21 minutes ago

    *data doesn't go back beyond 2000, safe to ignore

    • pjc50 18 minutes ago

      ???

      Data quality issues usually get worse the further back you go.

  • nomilk 44 minutes ago

    Only 1.7m people left North America in 2023 (4.4m arrivals). Would be interesting to compare to figures from 2025.

    • gcanyon 37 minutes ago

      > interesting

      You have a funny way of spelling "sad" my friend.

  • gaiagraphia 27 minutes ago

    Here's the actual graph/data in question. The article is a dense academic snooooooozefest:

    https://www.socsc.hku.hk/rhps/global-migration/

    Ffs, trying to click on a country and the globe keeps rotating, hahah. When i click on nations, it doesn't tell me the numbers either, there's just these blobby lines :/

    Not very usable.

    • Milpotel 19 minutes ago

      Options -> change projection helps a little bit.

  • firesteelrain an hour ago

    Can someone explain the graphic?

    • blondie9x 36 minutes ago

      The graphic seems vague and not particularly revealing.

      • firesteelrain 15 minutes ago

        I was trying to figure out the inflow and outflow. It looks bidirectional.

  • somelamer567 31 minutes ago

    The year 2000 also happens to coincide with the rise of the Putin regime. One of their favourite methods of statecraft is to spitefully lash out at perceived "enemies" by using their enormous information-warfare capability to stoke irregular immigration in ways to maximise chaos in countries that Russia hates and resents.

  • curiousObject 2 hours ago

    People who believe they are financially secure may move from regions which are considered “wealthy” to regions which are seen to be “poorer” (and cheaper). This outflow can influence this data.

    https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/american-...

    • swiftcoder an hour ago

      > This outflow can influence this data

      Influence how? Migrations from wealthy to poor regions are still migrations, no?