Remittances and land change a systematic review

Remittances—funds sent by migrants to family and friends back home—are an important source of global monetary flows, and they have implications for the maintenance and transformation of land systems. A number of published reviews have synthesized work on a variety of aspects of remittances (e.g., rural livelihoods, disasters, and economic development). To our knowledge, there are no reviews of work investigating the linkages between remittances and land change, broadly understood. This knowledge gap is important to address because researchers have recognized that remittances flows are a mechanism that helps to explain how migration can affect land change. Thus, understanding the specific roles remittances play in land system changes should help to clarify the multiple processes associated with migration and their independent and interactive effects. To address the state of knowledge about the connection between remittances and land systems, this paper conducts a systematic review. Our review of 51 journal articles finds that the linkages uncovered were commonly subtle and/or indirect. Very few studies looked at the direct connections between receipt of remittances and quantitative changes in land. Most commonly, the relationship between remittances and land change was found to occur through pathways from labor migration to household income to agricultural development and productivity. We find four non-exclusive pathways through which households spend remittances with consequent changes to land systems: (1) agricultural crops and livestock, (2) agricultural labor and technologies, (3) land purchases, and (4) non-agricultural purchases and consumables. In the papers reviewed, these expenditures are linked to various land system change outcomes, including land use change, soil degradation, pasture degradation, afforestation/deforestation/degradation, agricultural intensification/extensification/diversification, and no impact. These findings suggest four avenues for future research. One avenue is the use of the theoretical lens of telecoupling to understand how remittances may produce wider-scale changes in land systems. A second avenue is further examination of the impacts of shocks and disturbances to remittance flows on land change both in migrant sending and in remittance receiving areas. A third avenue is scholarship that examines the extent that household uses of remittances have a ”ripple effect” on land uses in nearby interlinked systems. A fourth avenue for future work is the use of spatially explicit modeling that leverages land cover and land use data based on imagery and other geospatial information.

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Main Authors: Mack, Elizabeth A. autora, Sauls, Laura Aileen autora, Jokisch, Brad D. autor, Nolte, Kerstin autor, Schmook, Birgit Inge Doctora autora 8472, He, Yifan autor/a, Radel, Claudia Doctora autora 13516, Allington, Ginger R. H. autor/a, Kelley, Lisa C. autora, Scott, Christian Kelly autora, Leisz, Stephen autor, Chi, Guangqing autor/a, Sagynbekova, Lira autora, Cuba, Nicholas autor, Henebry, Geoffrey M. autor
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Remesas de los emigrantes, Cambio de uso de la tierra, Migración laboral,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2023.106251
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:63863
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Remesas de los emigrantes
Cambio de uso de la tierra
Migración laboral
Remesas de los emigrantes
Cambio de uso de la tierra
Migración laboral
spellingShingle Remesas de los emigrantes
Cambio de uso de la tierra
Migración laboral
Remesas de los emigrantes
Cambio de uso de la tierra
Migración laboral
Mack, Elizabeth A. autora
Sauls, Laura Aileen autora
Jokisch, Brad D. autor
Nolte, Kerstin autor
Schmook, Birgit Inge Doctora autora 8472
He, Yifan autor/a
Radel, Claudia Doctora autora 13516
Allington, Ginger R. H. autor/a
Kelley, Lisa C. autora
Scott, Christian Kelly autora
Leisz, Stephen autor
Chi, Guangqing autor/a
Sagynbekova, Lira autora
Cuba, Nicholas autor
Henebry, Geoffrey M. autor
Remittances and land change a systematic review
description Remittances—funds sent by migrants to family and friends back home—are an important source of global monetary flows, and they have implications for the maintenance and transformation of land systems. A number of published reviews have synthesized work on a variety of aspects of remittances (e.g., rural livelihoods, disasters, and economic development). To our knowledge, there are no reviews of work investigating the linkages between remittances and land change, broadly understood. This knowledge gap is important to address because researchers have recognized that remittances flows are a mechanism that helps to explain how migration can affect land change. Thus, understanding the specific roles remittances play in land system changes should help to clarify the multiple processes associated with migration and their independent and interactive effects. To address the state of knowledge about the connection between remittances and land systems, this paper conducts a systematic review. Our review of 51 journal articles finds that the linkages uncovered were commonly subtle and/or indirect. Very few studies looked at the direct connections between receipt of remittances and quantitative changes in land. Most commonly, the relationship between remittances and land change was found to occur through pathways from labor migration to household income to agricultural development and productivity. We find four non-exclusive pathways through which households spend remittances with consequent changes to land systems: (1) agricultural crops and livestock, (2) agricultural labor and technologies, (3) land purchases, and (4) non-agricultural purchases and consumables. In the papers reviewed, these expenditures are linked to various land system change outcomes, including land use change, soil degradation, pasture degradation, afforestation/deforestation/degradation, agricultural intensification/extensification/diversification, and no impact. These findings suggest four avenues for future research. One avenue is the use of the theoretical lens of telecoupling to understand how remittances may produce wider-scale changes in land systems. A second avenue is further examination of the impacts of shocks and disturbances to remittance flows on land change both in migrant sending and in remittance receiving areas. A third avenue is scholarship that examines the extent that household uses of remittances have a ”ripple effect” on land uses in nearby interlinked systems. A fourth avenue for future work is the use of spatially explicit modeling that leverages land cover and land use data based on imagery and other geospatial information.
format Texto
topic_facet Remesas de los emigrantes
Cambio de uso de la tierra
Migración laboral
author Mack, Elizabeth A. autora
Sauls, Laura Aileen autora
Jokisch, Brad D. autor
Nolte, Kerstin autor
Schmook, Birgit Inge Doctora autora 8472
He, Yifan autor/a
Radel, Claudia Doctora autora 13516
Allington, Ginger R. H. autor/a
Kelley, Lisa C. autora
Scott, Christian Kelly autora
Leisz, Stephen autor
Chi, Guangqing autor/a
Sagynbekova, Lira autora
Cuba, Nicholas autor
Henebry, Geoffrey M. autor
author_facet Mack, Elizabeth A. autora
Sauls, Laura Aileen autora
Jokisch, Brad D. autor
Nolte, Kerstin autor
Schmook, Birgit Inge Doctora autora 8472
He, Yifan autor/a
Radel, Claudia Doctora autora 13516
Allington, Ginger R. H. autor/a
Kelley, Lisa C. autora
Scott, Christian Kelly autora
Leisz, Stephen autor
Chi, Guangqing autor/a
Sagynbekova, Lira autora
Cuba, Nicholas autor
Henebry, Geoffrey M. autor
author_sort Mack, Elizabeth A. autora
title Remittances and land change a systematic review
title_short Remittances and land change a systematic review
title_full Remittances and land change a systematic review
title_fullStr Remittances and land change a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Remittances and land change a systematic review
title_sort remittances and land change a systematic review
url https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2023.106251
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:638632024-03-12T12:34:05ZRemittances and land change a systematic review Mack, Elizabeth A. autora Sauls, Laura Aileen autora Jokisch, Brad D. autor Nolte, Kerstin autor Schmook, Birgit Inge Doctora autora 8472 He, Yifan autor/a Radel, Claudia Doctora autora 13516 Allington, Ginger R. H. autor/a Kelley, Lisa C. autora Scott, Christian Kelly autora Leisz, Stephen autor Chi, Guangqing autor/a Sagynbekova, Lira autora Cuba, Nicholas autor Henebry, Geoffrey M. autor textengRemittances—funds sent by migrants to family and friends back home—are an important source of global monetary flows, and they have implications for the maintenance and transformation of land systems. A number of published reviews have synthesized work on a variety of aspects of remittances (e.g., rural livelihoods, disasters, and economic development). To our knowledge, there are no reviews of work investigating the linkages between remittances and land change, broadly understood. This knowledge gap is important to address because researchers have recognized that remittances flows are a mechanism that helps to explain how migration can affect land change. Thus, understanding the specific roles remittances play in land system changes should help to clarify the multiple processes associated with migration and their independent and interactive effects. To address the state of knowledge about the connection between remittances and land systems, this paper conducts a systematic review. Our review of 51 journal articles finds that the linkages uncovered were commonly subtle and/or indirect. Very few studies looked at the direct connections between receipt of remittances and quantitative changes in land. Most commonly, the relationship between remittances and land change was found to occur through pathways from labor migration to household income to agricultural development and productivity. We find four non-exclusive pathways through which households spend remittances with consequent changes to land systems: (1) agricultural crops and livestock, (2) agricultural labor and technologies, (3) land purchases, and (4) non-agricultural purchases and consumables. In the papers reviewed, these expenditures are linked to various land system change outcomes, including land use change, soil degradation, pasture degradation, afforestation/deforestation/degradation, agricultural intensification/extensification/diversification, and no impact. These findings suggest four avenues for future research. One avenue is the use of the theoretical lens of telecoupling to understand how remittances may produce wider-scale changes in land systems. A second avenue is further examination of the impacts of shocks and disturbances to remittance flows on land change both in migrant sending and in remittance receiving areas. A third avenue is scholarship that examines the extent that household uses of remittances have a ”ripple effect” on land uses in nearby interlinked systems. A fourth avenue for future work is the use of spatially explicit modeling that leverages land cover and land use data based on imagery and other geospatial information.Remittances—funds sent by migrants to family and friends back home—are an important source of global monetary flows, and they have implications for the maintenance and transformation of land systems. A number of published reviews have synthesized work on a variety of aspects of remittances (e.g., rural livelihoods, disasters, and economic development). To our knowledge, there are no reviews of work investigating the linkages between remittances and land change, broadly understood. This knowledge gap is important to address because researchers have recognized that remittances flows are a mechanism that helps to explain how migration can affect land change. Thus, understanding the specific roles remittances play in land system changes should help to clarify the multiple processes associated with migration and their independent and interactive effects. To address the state of knowledge about the connection between remittances and land systems, this paper conducts a systematic review. Our review of 51 journal articles finds that the linkages uncovered were commonly subtle and/or indirect. Very few studies looked at the direct connections between receipt of remittances and quantitative changes in land. Most commonly, the relationship between remittances and land change was found to occur through pathways from labor migration to household income to agricultural development and productivity. We find four non-exclusive pathways through which households spend remittances with consequent changes to land systems: (1) agricultural crops and livestock, (2) agricultural labor and technologies, (3) land purchases, and (4) non-agricultural purchases and consumables. In the papers reviewed, these expenditures are linked to various land system change outcomes, including land use change, soil degradation, pasture degradation, afforestation/deforestation/degradation, agricultural intensification/extensification/diversification, and no impact. These findings suggest four avenues for future research. One avenue is the use of the theoretical lens of telecoupling to understand how remittances may produce wider-scale changes in land systems. A second avenue is further examination of the impacts of shocks and disturbances to remittance flows on land change both in migrant sending and in remittance receiving areas. A third avenue is scholarship that examines the extent that household uses of remittances have a ”ripple effect” on land uses in nearby interlinked systems. A fourth avenue for future work is the use of spatially explicit modeling that leverages land cover and land use data based on imagery and other geospatial information.Remesas de los emigrantesCambio de uso de la tierraMigración laboralWorld Developmenthttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2023.106251Acceso en línea sin restricciones