13 research outputs found

    Community Services and Out-Migration

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    This paper investigates the relationship between changing community context and out-migration in one of today’s poor countries, seeking to document the various mechanisms by which infrastructure affects the migratory behavior. We focus on the expansion of social and physical facilities and services near to rural people’s homes, including transportation, new markets, employment, schools, health clinics, and mass media outlets such as movie halls. We draw upon detailed data from Nepal to estimate the hypothesized effects. The direct effects of expanding economic and human capital infrastructure are clearly negative, reducing out-migration. However, increased economic infrastructure is associated with a greater accumulation of human and social capital among respondents and their parents. Through these intervening mechanisms, economic and social infrastructure increased the odds of migrating out. These results reveal the often countervailing nature of short- and long-term effects of economic and social change, and the complex pathways influencing migration outcomes.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/78714/1/j.1468-2435.2009.00581.x.pd

    Withdrawing from agrarian livelihoods: Environmental migration in Nepal

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    Health improvement for disadvantaged people in Nepal – an evaluation

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>An evaluation of progress with participatory approaches for improvement of health knowledge and health experiences of disadvantaged people in eight Districts of Eastern Nepal has been undertaken.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A random selection of Village Development Committees and households, within the eight Districts where participation and a Rights-based Approach had been promoted specifically by local NGOs were compared with similar villages and households in eight Districts where this approach had not been promoted. Information was sought by structured interview and observation by experienced enumerators from both groups of householders. Health knowledge and experiences were compared between the two sets of households. Adjustments were made for demographic confounders.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Complete data sets were available for 628 of the 640 households. Health knowledge and experiences were low for both sets of households. However, health knowledge and experiences were greater in the participatory households compared with the non-participatory households. These differences remained after adjustment for confounders.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The study was designed to evaluate progress with participatory processes delivered by non-governmental organisations over a five year period. Improvements in health knowledge and experiences of disadvantaged people were demonstrated in a consistent and robust manner where interventions had taken place.</p

    Creating Nepal in the Kathmandu Valley

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    References

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    Conclusion

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    Knowing the Problem

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    Ecologies of Invasion

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    Notes

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    Emergency Ecology and the Order of Renewal

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