Data from 15 Demographic and Health Surveys are used to examine whether rural-urban migrants in developing countries experience higher child mortality after settling in towns and cities than do lifelong urban residents, and if so, what individual or household characteristics account for this. Findings indicate that children of female migrants from the countryside generally have much poorer survival chances than other urban children. This survival disadvantage is more pronounced in big cities than in smaller urban areas, among migrants who have lived in the city for many years than among recent migrants, and in urban Latin America than in urban North Africa and sub-Saharan Africa. Within big cities, higher child mortality among migrant women...
This paper examines determinants and consequences of migration from urban slums using panel data fro...
Introduction. The relation of migration to infant outcomes is unclear. There are studies which show ...
textabstractOn average, child health outcomes are better in urban than in rural areas of developing ...
Large rural-urban child mortality differentials in many developing countries suggest that rural fami...
Evidence of higher child mortality of rural-to-urban migrants compared with urban nonmigrants is gro...
Migrants often have lower mortality than natives in spite of relatively unfavorable social and econo...
Between 60% and 70% of Nairobi City’s population live in congested informal settlements, commonly re...
The paper reviews the complex relationships between migration, urbanisation and health in a global p...
This paper examines the socioeconomic characteristics of rural-urban migrants, child mortality and m...
Nearly all demographic research on sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) utilizes a strict urban/rural dichotomy,...
Nearly all demographic research on sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) utilizes a strict urban/rural dichotomy,...
This thesis examines the impact that rural-urban migration has on child survival in India, and explo...
This study analyses the relationship between a household member’s migration and child mortality with...
Urban-rural comparisons of childhood undernutrition suggest that urban populations are better-off th...
This study analyzes data from a new Urban Health and Demographic Surveillance (UHDSS) in five slums ...
This paper examines determinants and consequences of migration from urban slums using panel data fro...
Introduction. The relation of migration to infant outcomes is unclear. There are studies which show ...
textabstractOn average, child health outcomes are better in urban than in rural areas of developing ...
Large rural-urban child mortality differentials in many developing countries suggest that rural fami...
Evidence of higher child mortality of rural-to-urban migrants compared with urban nonmigrants is gro...
Migrants often have lower mortality than natives in spite of relatively unfavorable social and econo...
Between 60% and 70% of Nairobi City’s population live in congested informal settlements, commonly re...
The paper reviews the complex relationships between migration, urbanisation and health in a global p...
This paper examines the socioeconomic characteristics of rural-urban migrants, child mortality and m...
Nearly all demographic research on sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) utilizes a strict urban/rural dichotomy,...
Nearly all demographic research on sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) utilizes a strict urban/rural dichotomy,...
This thesis examines the impact that rural-urban migration has on child survival in India, and explo...
This study analyses the relationship between a household member’s migration and child mortality with...
Urban-rural comparisons of childhood undernutrition suggest that urban populations are better-off th...
This study analyzes data from a new Urban Health and Demographic Surveillance (UHDSS) in five slums ...
This paper examines determinants and consequences of migration from urban slums using panel data fro...
Introduction. The relation of migration to infant outcomes is unclear. There are studies which show ...
textabstractOn average, child health outcomes are better in urban than in rural areas of developing ...