Has there ever been a major migration from the New World to the Old World? If not, why?












32














Considerable research has been done on the ancient migration of humans from Northeast Asia to the Americas. Between that and Columbus, there were a few smaller migration events from elsewhere in the world — including the Viking travels to North America, and possible Austronesian travels to South America.



However, these are all in the direction of Old World —> New World. Has movement in the reverse direction ever been identified? I don't know of any. Even in modern times, it seems as though the direction of migration has always been Old World —> New World.



I assume the best bet for finding evidence would be by the Bering Sea. It seems like there was occasional contact between Alaska and Siberia in pre-Columbian times, which may hint that there was a major migration at some point.










share|improve this question


















  • 4




    Hm... interesting. Has there ever, even, been a major "backwards" migration, period? I mean, have people migrated back from Europe to the Middle East? From the Middle East back to Africa? (Depends a bit on how you define "major", but yes... curious.)
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:41






  • 13




    @DevSolar Sure, f.e. the Chinese Central Plains were originally colonised from South China; later nomadic incursions caused massive repeated mass migrations back into to the South.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:48






  • 2




    @Semaphore: Thanks. I'm pretty "blind" as far as ancient Asian history is concerned. I found an example for a back-migration from the Americas, so that's settled anyway. ;-) But a good question!
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 5




    @DevSolar Well, people tend to move from bad or crowded places to good and empty places. There are definitely smaller-scale cases where e.g. shifts in climate, resource depletion or hostile neighbors made some place hard to live in (and people migrated out) and when the area became hospitable again, they returned. The collapse of the bronze age civilizations might be one rather large example. People returned when conditions (and technology) improved.
    – Luaan
    Dec 11 at 9:21






  • 7




    If you count economic migration, during 1981-2017, 2 million people emigrated from Latin America to Spain.
    – Alberto Yagos
    Dec 11 at 14:08


















32














Considerable research has been done on the ancient migration of humans from Northeast Asia to the Americas. Between that and Columbus, there were a few smaller migration events from elsewhere in the world — including the Viking travels to North America, and possible Austronesian travels to South America.



However, these are all in the direction of Old World —> New World. Has movement in the reverse direction ever been identified? I don't know of any. Even in modern times, it seems as though the direction of migration has always been Old World —> New World.



I assume the best bet for finding evidence would be by the Bering Sea. It seems like there was occasional contact between Alaska and Siberia in pre-Columbian times, which may hint that there was a major migration at some point.










share|improve this question


















  • 4




    Hm... interesting. Has there ever, even, been a major "backwards" migration, period? I mean, have people migrated back from Europe to the Middle East? From the Middle East back to Africa? (Depends a bit on how you define "major", but yes... curious.)
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:41






  • 13




    @DevSolar Sure, f.e. the Chinese Central Plains were originally colonised from South China; later nomadic incursions caused massive repeated mass migrations back into to the South.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:48






  • 2




    @Semaphore: Thanks. I'm pretty "blind" as far as ancient Asian history is concerned. I found an example for a back-migration from the Americas, so that's settled anyway. ;-) But a good question!
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 5




    @DevSolar Well, people tend to move from bad or crowded places to good and empty places. There are definitely smaller-scale cases where e.g. shifts in climate, resource depletion or hostile neighbors made some place hard to live in (and people migrated out) and when the area became hospitable again, they returned. The collapse of the bronze age civilizations might be one rather large example. People returned when conditions (and technology) improved.
    – Luaan
    Dec 11 at 9:21






  • 7




    If you count economic migration, during 1981-2017, 2 million people emigrated from Latin America to Spain.
    – Alberto Yagos
    Dec 11 at 14:08
















32












32








32


1





Considerable research has been done on the ancient migration of humans from Northeast Asia to the Americas. Between that and Columbus, there were a few smaller migration events from elsewhere in the world — including the Viking travels to North America, and possible Austronesian travels to South America.



However, these are all in the direction of Old World —> New World. Has movement in the reverse direction ever been identified? I don't know of any. Even in modern times, it seems as though the direction of migration has always been Old World —> New World.



I assume the best bet for finding evidence would be by the Bering Sea. It seems like there was occasional contact between Alaska and Siberia in pre-Columbian times, which may hint that there was a major migration at some point.










share|improve this question













Considerable research has been done on the ancient migration of humans from Northeast Asia to the Americas. Between that and Columbus, there were a few smaller migration events from elsewhere in the world — including the Viking travels to North America, and possible Austronesian travels to South America.



However, these are all in the direction of Old World —> New World. Has movement in the reverse direction ever been identified? I don't know of any. Even in modern times, it seems as though the direction of migration has always been Old World —> New World.



I assume the best bet for finding evidence would be by the Bering Sea. It seems like there was occasional contact between Alaska and Siberia in pre-Columbian times, which may hint that there was a major migration at some point.







native-americans new-world migration alaska






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 11 at 8:34









StarlightDown

164123




164123








  • 4




    Hm... interesting. Has there ever, even, been a major "backwards" migration, period? I mean, have people migrated back from Europe to the Middle East? From the Middle East back to Africa? (Depends a bit on how you define "major", but yes... curious.)
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:41






  • 13




    @DevSolar Sure, f.e. the Chinese Central Plains were originally colonised from South China; later nomadic incursions caused massive repeated mass migrations back into to the South.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:48






  • 2




    @Semaphore: Thanks. I'm pretty "blind" as far as ancient Asian history is concerned. I found an example for a back-migration from the Americas, so that's settled anyway. ;-) But a good question!
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 5




    @DevSolar Well, people tend to move from bad or crowded places to good and empty places. There are definitely smaller-scale cases where e.g. shifts in climate, resource depletion or hostile neighbors made some place hard to live in (and people migrated out) and when the area became hospitable again, they returned. The collapse of the bronze age civilizations might be one rather large example. People returned when conditions (and technology) improved.
    – Luaan
    Dec 11 at 9:21






  • 7




    If you count economic migration, during 1981-2017, 2 million people emigrated from Latin America to Spain.
    – Alberto Yagos
    Dec 11 at 14:08
















  • 4




    Hm... interesting. Has there ever, even, been a major "backwards" migration, period? I mean, have people migrated back from Europe to the Middle East? From the Middle East back to Africa? (Depends a bit on how you define "major", but yes... curious.)
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:41






  • 13




    @DevSolar Sure, f.e. the Chinese Central Plains were originally colonised from South China; later nomadic incursions caused massive repeated mass migrations back into to the South.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:48






  • 2




    @Semaphore: Thanks. I'm pretty "blind" as far as ancient Asian history is concerned. I found an example for a back-migration from the Americas, so that's settled anyway. ;-) But a good question!
    – DevSolar
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 5




    @DevSolar Well, people tend to move from bad or crowded places to good and empty places. There are definitely smaller-scale cases where e.g. shifts in climate, resource depletion or hostile neighbors made some place hard to live in (and people migrated out) and when the area became hospitable again, they returned. The collapse of the bronze age civilizations might be one rather large example. People returned when conditions (and technology) improved.
    – Luaan
    Dec 11 at 9:21






  • 7




    If you count economic migration, during 1981-2017, 2 million people emigrated from Latin America to Spain.
    – Alberto Yagos
    Dec 11 at 14:08










4




4




Hm... interesting. Has there ever, even, been a major "backwards" migration, period? I mean, have people migrated back from Europe to the Middle East? From the Middle East back to Africa? (Depends a bit on how you define "major", but yes... curious.)
– DevSolar
Dec 11 at 8:41




Hm... interesting. Has there ever, even, been a major "backwards" migration, period? I mean, have people migrated back from Europe to the Middle East? From the Middle East back to Africa? (Depends a bit on how you define "major", but yes... curious.)
– DevSolar
Dec 11 at 8:41




13




13




@DevSolar Sure, f.e. the Chinese Central Plains were originally colonised from South China; later nomadic incursions caused massive repeated mass migrations back into to the South.
– Semaphore
Dec 11 at 8:48




@DevSolar Sure, f.e. the Chinese Central Plains were originally colonised from South China; later nomadic incursions caused massive repeated mass migrations back into to the South.
– Semaphore
Dec 11 at 8:48




2




2




@Semaphore: Thanks. I'm pretty "blind" as far as ancient Asian history is concerned. I found an example for a back-migration from the Americas, so that's settled anyway. ;-) But a good question!
– DevSolar
Dec 11 at 8:51




@Semaphore: Thanks. I'm pretty "blind" as far as ancient Asian history is concerned. I found an example for a back-migration from the Americas, so that's settled anyway. ;-) But a good question!
– DevSolar
Dec 11 at 8:51




5




5




@DevSolar Well, people tend to move from bad or crowded places to good and empty places. There are definitely smaller-scale cases where e.g. shifts in climate, resource depletion or hostile neighbors made some place hard to live in (and people migrated out) and when the area became hospitable again, they returned. The collapse of the bronze age civilizations might be one rather large example. People returned when conditions (and technology) improved.
– Luaan
Dec 11 at 9:21




@DevSolar Well, people tend to move from bad or crowded places to good and empty places. There are definitely smaller-scale cases where e.g. shifts in climate, resource depletion or hostile neighbors made some place hard to live in (and people migrated out) and when the area became hospitable again, they returned. The collapse of the bronze age civilizations might be one rather large example. People returned when conditions (and technology) improved.
– Luaan
Dec 11 at 9:21




7




7




If you count economic migration, during 1981-2017, 2 million people emigrated from Latin America to Spain.
– Alberto Yagos
Dec 11 at 14:08






If you count economic migration, during 1981-2017, 2 million people emigrated from Latin America to Spain.
– Alberto Yagos
Dec 11 at 14:08












6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















54














As DevSolar mentioned in his comment, this really depends on how you define 'major', but here are several case of migrants moving from the New to the Old World.





From the Caribbean to Europe



According the (British) National Archives, between 1948 and 1970,




nearly half a million people left their homes in the West Indies to
live in Britain




There were also significant migrations to France and the Netherlands. According to Migration from the Colonies to Western Europe since 1800




In 1975, more than 100,000 migrants from the Caribbean were living in
metropolitan France.




Also, around 180,000 Surinamese immigrants arrived in the Netherlands, mostly between 1975 and 1980.





From North America to West Africa



Another, much smaller but nonetheless historically significant migration from New to Old led to the founding of Liberia. This involved the migration of around 13,000 African Americans during the nineteenth century.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    I came here to answer 'Liberia'.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:40



















49














Yes, there has been.



As this infographic shows, there has been a back-migration of the DNA haplogroups C1a and A2a from North America (well, Beringia...) back into Asia.



enter image description here



The infographic is sourced as Tamm E, Kivisild T, Reidla M, Metspalu M, Smith DG, et al. (2007) Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders. PLoS ONE 2(9): e829. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000829.



Other (later) back-migrations might exist; I understood that your question would be answered with one "yes" already and stopped searching at this point.






share|improve this answer



















  • 10




    Well, this depends on whether you classify Beringia as part of the New World - it's kind of in between, in more sense than one. +1 nevertheless.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 3




    For anyone googling for those DNA groups, those are the indigenous populations of Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Eskimos etc. ref1 and ref2
    – Mindwin
    Dec 11 at 16:24



















24














In addition to Lars Bosteen's answer about modern migration, several hundred thousand South American people have migrated to Spain in the last decades, and Brazilians have became the largest group of foreigners in Portugal. Other European countries with fewer ties and common background with America seem to host smaller populations.



Furthermore, if the "native-americans" tag in the question means that the OP is more interested in migration of descendants of native Americans than migration of Americans of European descent, the migration of Ecuadorians to Spain may qualify as the largest trans-Atlantic migration of people of native American or mixed descent.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    @reirab - Fixed. Thank you for pointing.
    – Pere
    Dec 14 at 14:53










  • I don't have the rep on History to submit an answer to a protected question. (Toss me a few up-arrows to fix that!) but: 1) Japan sought Japanese-blood Brazilians to come back to Japan for labor in the 1980s. I believe tens of thousands took part. 2) Millions have obviously returned to Israel. 3) Japanese came from Korea and Manchuria (and maybe Polynesia?) in prehistory, and 1900-1940 many Japanese moved back there as conquerors. 4) I think North Africans came not from Sub-Saharan Africa but from Arabia (came back to same continent, though not same place.) 5) white South Africans ditto.
    – Swiss Frank
    Dec 15 at 19:39



















9














Horses evolved on the North American landmass, emigrated across the Bering land bridge, then went extinct in the Americas.






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  • 10




    While interesting, I believe this question is concerned with human migration.
    – GreySage
    Dec 11 at 18:32






  • 2




    @GreySage Perhaps there is coyote wisdom and historical satire to be found in the answer. Consider A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift.
    – guest271314
    Dec 11 at 18:48








  • 1




    Really? Why did they go extinct? There's no predators. They are faster than bears.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:45






  • 3




    @Chloe Horses went extinct in North America as part of the extinction of many species at the end of the Pleistocene, when there was a global cooling event. As well as the vegetation changing rapidly, the end of the Pleistocene is also saw a major new predator arrive in the Americas: man. This was when the woolly mammoth, American camels, dire wolves, short-faced bears, saber-toothed cats, stag-moose, woolly rhinos and giant ground sloths became extinct.
    – Martin Bonner
    Dec 14 at 15:50












  • @MartinBonner Wait, dire wolves were real? Does that mean shadow cats were real too? So sad that people decided to eat horses instead of ride them like the rest of the world.
    – Chloe
    Dec 14 at 23:15



















4














The question is tagged native-americans and alaska though uses the term new-world, which is a purely Eurocentric perspective. Also, it is not immediately clear what "Old World" means in regards to locales other than Europe proper; or if the question is focused on actual Native Americans or individuals and institutions who invaded Turtle Island and now claim the geography as their own by right of conquest. It must also be noted here that Native American prisoners of war (commonly referred to as "slaves") were shipped to Europe from the "New World" prior to the abolition of "slavery" in the "New World"; which is not migration, but rather a tactic of war to seize and control the land of the original people in the "New World"; i.e.g., see Colonists shipped Native Americans abroad as slaves by Gillian Kiley-Brown




While natives had been forced into slavery and servitude as early as
1636, it was not until King Philip’s War that natives were enslaved in
large numbers, Fisher writes in the study. The 1675 to 1676 war pitted
Native American leader King Philip, also known as Metacom, and his
allies against the English colonial settlers.



During the war, New England colonies routinely shipped Native
Americans as slaves to Barbados, Bermuda, Jamaica, the Azores, Spain,
and Tangier in North Africa, Fisher says.




Have inquired into why people of European descent do not migrate or "caravan" back to Europe en masse. The conclusion that have drawn is that the conditions which precipitated mass departure from Europe between 1500 and 1900 still exist; and people who claim to be of European descent in the "New World" actually have little interest in returning to the lands and culture they claim by virtue of purported ancestral lineage or "origin", as the evidence supports.



People who claim to be "Jew" do more frequently migrate to Isreal which could be considered "Old World", unless, again by the term "Old World" the question refers to only regions of Europe proper, or euphemistically; that is, the question does not present definitive nations or geographic locations specifying precisely where "Old World" supposedly begins or concludes, certainly not from the perspective of individuals who do not self-identify as "European"; or if such notions of "Old World" exist primarily as nostalgia in individuals' minds who claim to be of European descent, as an expression of Eurocentrism, negating the fact that "Old World" could also be applicable to "Africa" or "Australia", et al.; as the designation "Old World" is not commonly found on any map.



In any event, see Aliyah




(US: /ˌæliˈɑː/, UK: /ˌɑː-/; Hebrew: עֲלִיָּה‬ aliyah, "ascent") is
the immigration of Jews from the diaspora to the Land of Israel (Eretz
Israel in Hebrew). Also defined as "the act of going up"—that is,
towards Jerusalem—"making Aliyah" by moving to the Land of Israel is
one of the most basic tenets of Zionism.







Aliyah from Latin America



In the 1999–2002 Argentine political and economic crisis that caused a
run on the banks, wiped out billions of dollars in deposits and
decimated Argentina's middle class, most of the country's estimated
200,000 Jews were directly affected. Some 4,400 chose to start over
and move to Israel, where they saw opportunity.



More than 10,000 Argentine Jews immigrated to Israel since 2000,
joining the thousands of previous Argentine immigrants already there.
The crisis in Argentina also affected its neighbour country Uruguay,
from which about half of its 40,000-strong Jewish community left,
mainly to Israel, in the same period. During 2002 and 2003 the Jewish
Agency for Israel launched an intensive public campaign to promote
aliyah from the region, and offered additional economic aid for
immigrants from Argentina. Although the economy of Argentina improved,
and some who had immigrated to Israel from Argentina moved back
following South American country's economic growth from 2003 onwards,
Argentine Jews continue to immigrate to Israel, albeit in smaller
numbers than before. The Argentine community in Israel is about
50,000-70,000 people, the largest Latin American group in the country.



There has also been immigration from other Latin American countries
that have experienced crises, though they have come in smaller numbers
and are not eligible for the same economic benefits as immigrants to
Israel from Argentina.



In Venezuela, growing antisemitism in the country, including
antisemitic violence, caused an increasing number of Jews to move to
Israel during the 2000s. For the first time in Venezuelan history,
Jews began leaving for Israel in the hundreds. By November 2010, more
than half of Venezuela's 20,000-strong Jewish community had left the
country.51, 52







Aliyah from North America



More than 200,000 North American immigrants live in Israel. There has
been a steady flow of immigration from North America since Israel’s
inception in 1948.82, 83



Several thousand American Jews moved to Mandate Palestine before the
State of Israel was established. From Israel's establishment in 1948
to the Six-Day War in 1967, aliyah from the United States and Canada
was minimal. In 1959, a former President of the Association of
Americans and Canadians in Israel estimated that out of the 35,000
American and Canadian Jews who had made aliyah, only 6,000
remained.84



Following the Six-Day War in 1967, and the subsequent euphoria among
world Jewry, significant numbers arrived in the late 1960s and 1970s,
whereas it had been a mere trickle before. Between 1967 and 1973,
60,000 North American Jews immigrated to Israel. However, many of them
later returned to their original countries. An estimated 58% of
American Jews who immigrated to Israel between 1961 and 1972 ended up
returning to the United States.85, 86



Like Western European immigrants, North Americans tend to immigrate to
Israel more for religious, ideological, and political purposes, and
not financial or security ones.87 Many immigrants
began arriving in Israel after the First and Second Intifada, with a
total of 3,052 arriving in 2005 — the highest number since
1983.88



Nefesh B'Nefesh, founded in 2002 by Rabbi Yehoshua Fass and Tony
Gelbart, works to encourage Aliyah from North America and the UK by
providing financial assistance, employment services and streamlined
governmental procedures. Nefesh B’Nefesh works in cooperation with the
Jewish Agency and the Israeli Government in increasing the numbers of
North American and British immigrants.



Following the Global Financial Crisis in the late 2000s, American
Jewish immigration to Israel rose. This wave of immigration was
triggered by Israel's lower unemployment rate, combined with financial
incentives offered to new Jewish immigrants. In 2009, aliyah was at
its highest in 36 years, with 3,324 North American Jews making
aliyah.89










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  • 5




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Dec 11 at 18:53



















0














As to "why": Unforced migration is opportunistic. Moving somewhere else is risky and requires effort so that a degree of suffering at the current location or at least a substantial promise of improvement at the target location is needed to start a migration.



Prominent examples are the Irish famine or the Californian gold rush. More generally, the migration of Europeans which was not the direct result of religious prosecution and famines was motivated by perceived opportunities abroad which were not present at home.



Some of the opportunities were social — the feudalistic, strictly organized societies of the 17th and 18th century were severely regulating the lives of the common people while the founding document of the United States explicitly stated that "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" were "inherent and inalienable rights" of man.



More direct, materialistic opportunities were present in the abundance of natural resources, mostly land, which is attractive to members of pre-industrial societies in full possession of their abilities (chiefly young, adventurous, energetic people).1



With this analysis we can predict that the direction of migration may reverse when opportunities in the Americas appear much worse than in Europe. An aging and shrinking European population may generate attractive job and housing opportunities, and bad governance in the Americas (including the U.S., if you look at it) may decrease opportunities there. As others have remarked such a trend can already be observed.






1 As an aside, I can observe some traits of people most likely to emigrate from Europe — e.g. being religious, entrepreneurial, adventurous, optimistic and energetic — in America still today, while they sometimes seem to lack in Europe.




share|improve this answer























  • Sources might improve this answer. // Your footnote is regurgitating myths, and quite a few of them mixed. If you take these assertions to a structural perspective, it all disaapears. Small scale example: Go to a bad neighbourhood in N or S America, then compare that to quarters that are just starting gentrification anywhere in Europe. There are no essentialist differences in traits of people compared, but economic and cultural factors of quite some significance if you want to look at it at this macro-level.
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 14:54












  • @LangLangCn Yes, sources would most certainly improve the answer. Anybody? // I made the observation of traits personally with American acquiantances; it's quite obvious but only anecdotal, so I edited the footnote to make that clear.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:03












  • But that observation is anecdotal evidence and from a highly biased sample and formed via your own bias/expectations. Far from a reliable fact. –– On the other hand, add these caveats and it becomes reasonable observation (in fact one often heard), instantly. ;)
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 15:06






  • 1




    @LangLangC Another remark to sources: The facts (need for motivation to migrate, social norms, abundance of resources, Declaration of Independence) are obvious and undisputed; the conclusions are all mine and seem fairly obvious. The merit of my answer (if any) is to structure them and sum them up.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:12












protected by Semaphore Dec 11 at 19:33



Thank you for your interest in this question.
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6 Answers
6






active

oldest

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6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









54














As DevSolar mentioned in his comment, this really depends on how you define 'major', but here are several case of migrants moving from the New to the Old World.





From the Caribbean to Europe



According the (British) National Archives, between 1948 and 1970,




nearly half a million people left their homes in the West Indies to
live in Britain




There were also significant migrations to France and the Netherlands. According to Migration from the Colonies to Western Europe since 1800




In 1975, more than 100,000 migrants from the Caribbean were living in
metropolitan France.




Also, around 180,000 Surinamese immigrants arrived in the Netherlands, mostly between 1975 and 1980.





From North America to West Africa



Another, much smaller but nonetheless historically significant migration from New to Old led to the founding of Liberia. This involved the migration of around 13,000 African Americans during the nineteenth century.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    I came here to answer 'Liberia'.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:40
















54














As DevSolar mentioned in his comment, this really depends on how you define 'major', but here are several case of migrants moving from the New to the Old World.





From the Caribbean to Europe



According the (British) National Archives, between 1948 and 1970,




nearly half a million people left their homes in the West Indies to
live in Britain




There were also significant migrations to France and the Netherlands. According to Migration from the Colonies to Western Europe since 1800




In 1975, more than 100,000 migrants from the Caribbean were living in
metropolitan France.




Also, around 180,000 Surinamese immigrants arrived in the Netherlands, mostly between 1975 and 1980.





From North America to West Africa



Another, much smaller but nonetheless historically significant migration from New to Old led to the founding of Liberia. This involved the migration of around 13,000 African Americans during the nineteenth century.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    I came here to answer 'Liberia'.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:40














54












54








54






As DevSolar mentioned in his comment, this really depends on how you define 'major', but here are several case of migrants moving from the New to the Old World.





From the Caribbean to Europe



According the (British) National Archives, between 1948 and 1970,




nearly half a million people left their homes in the West Indies to
live in Britain




There were also significant migrations to France and the Netherlands. According to Migration from the Colonies to Western Europe since 1800




In 1975, more than 100,000 migrants from the Caribbean were living in
metropolitan France.




Also, around 180,000 Surinamese immigrants arrived in the Netherlands, mostly between 1975 and 1980.





From North America to West Africa



Another, much smaller but nonetheless historically significant migration from New to Old led to the founding of Liberia. This involved the migration of around 13,000 African Americans during the nineteenth century.






share|improve this answer














As DevSolar mentioned in his comment, this really depends on how you define 'major', but here are several case of migrants moving from the New to the Old World.





From the Caribbean to Europe



According the (British) National Archives, between 1948 and 1970,




nearly half a million people left their homes in the West Indies to
live in Britain




There were also significant migrations to France and the Netherlands. According to Migration from the Colonies to Western Europe since 1800




In 1975, more than 100,000 migrants from the Caribbean were living in
metropolitan France.




Also, around 180,000 Surinamese immigrants arrived in the Netherlands, mostly between 1975 and 1980.





From North America to West Africa



Another, much smaller but nonetheless historically significant migration from New to Old led to the founding of Liberia. This involved the migration of around 13,000 African Americans during the nineteenth century.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 11 at 9:21

























answered Dec 11 at 8:53









Lars Bosteen

37.3k8180243




37.3k8180243








  • 3




    I came here to answer 'Liberia'.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:40














  • 3




    I came here to answer 'Liberia'.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:40








3




3




I came here to answer 'Liberia'.
– Chloe
Dec 13 at 19:40




I came here to answer 'Liberia'.
– Chloe
Dec 13 at 19:40











49














Yes, there has been.



As this infographic shows, there has been a back-migration of the DNA haplogroups C1a and A2a from North America (well, Beringia...) back into Asia.



enter image description here



The infographic is sourced as Tamm E, Kivisild T, Reidla M, Metspalu M, Smith DG, et al. (2007) Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders. PLoS ONE 2(9): e829. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000829.



Other (later) back-migrations might exist; I understood that your question would be answered with one "yes" already and stopped searching at this point.






share|improve this answer



















  • 10




    Well, this depends on whether you classify Beringia as part of the New World - it's kind of in between, in more sense than one. +1 nevertheless.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 3




    For anyone googling for those DNA groups, those are the indigenous populations of Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Eskimos etc. ref1 and ref2
    – Mindwin
    Dec 11 at 16:24
















49














Yes, there has been.



As this infographic shows, there has been a back-migration of the DNA haplogroups C1a and A2a from North America (well, Beringia...) back into Asia.



enter image description here



The infographic is sourced as Tamm E, Kivisild T, Reidla M, Metspalu M, Smith DG, et al. (2007) Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders. PLoS ONE 2(9): e829. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000829.



Other (later) back-migrations might exist; I understood that your question would be answered with one "yes" already and stopped searching at this point.






share|improve this answer



















  • 10




    Well, this depends on whether you classify Beringia as part of the New World - it's kind of in between, in more sense than one. +1 nevertheless.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 3




    For anyone googling for those DNA groups, those are the indigenous populations of Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Eskimos etc. ref1 and ref2
    – Mindwin
    Dec 11 at 16:24














49












49








49






Yes, there has been.



As this infographic shows, there has been a back-migration of the DNA haplogroups C1a and A2a from North America (well, Beringia...) back into Asia.



enter image description here



The infographic is sourced as Tamm E, Kivisild T, Reidla M, Metspalu M, Smith DG, et al. (2007) Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders. PLoS ONE 2(9): e829. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000829.



Other (later) back-migrations might exist; I understood that your question would be answered with one "yes" already and stopped searching at this point.






share|improve this answer














Yes, there has been.



As this infographic shows, there has been a back-migration of the DNA haplogroups C1a and A2a from North America (well, Beringia...) back into Asia.



enter image description here



The infographic is sourced as Tamm E, Kivisild T, Reidla M, Metspalu M, Smith DG, et al. (2007) Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders. PLoS ONE 2(9): e829. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000829.



Other (later) back-migrations might exist; I understood that your question would be answered with one "yes" already and stopped searching at this point.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 11 at 8:52

























answered Dec 11 at 8:45









DevSolar

6,2411946




6,2411946








  • 10




    Well, this depends on whether you classify Beringia as part of the New World - it's kind of in between, in more sense than one. +1 nevertheless.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 3




    For anyone googling for those DNA groups, those are the indigenous populations of Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Eskimos etc. ref1 and ref2
    – Mindwin
    Dec 11 at 16:24














  • 10




    Well, this depends on whether you classify Beringia as part of the New World - it's kind of in between, in more sense than one. +1 nevertheless.
    – Semaphore
    Dec 11 at 8:51






  • 3




    For anyone googling for those DNA groups, those are the indigenous populations of Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Eskimos etc. ref1 and ref2
    – Mindwin
    Dec 11 at 16:24








10




10




Well, this depends on whether you classify Beringia as part of the New World - it's kind of in between, in more sense than one. +1 nevertheless.
– Semaphore
Dec 11 at 8:51




Well, this depends on whether you classify Beringia as part of the New World - it's kind of in between, in more sense than one. +1 nevertheless.
– Semaphore
Dec 11 at 8:51




3




3




For anyone googling for those DNA groups, those are the indigenous populations of Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Eskimos etc. ref1 and ref2
– Mindwin
Dec 11 at 16:24




For anyone googling for those DNA groups, those are the indigenous populations of Siberia, the Aleutian Islands, Eskimos etc. ref1 and ref2
– Mindwin
Dec 11 at 16:24











24














In addition to Lars Bosteen's answer about modern migration, several hundred thousand South American people have migrated to Spain in the last decades, and Brazilians have became the largest group of foreigners in Portugal. Other European countries with fewer ties and common background with America seem to host smaller populations.



Furthermore, if the "native-americans" tag in the question means that the OP is more interested in migration of descendants of native Americans than migration of Americans of European descent, the migration of Ecuadorians to Spain may qualify as the largest trans-Atlantic migration of people of native American or mixed descent.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    @reirab - Fixed. Thank you for pointing.
    – Pere
    Dec 14 at 14:53










  • I don't have the rep on History to submit an answer to a protected question. (Toss me a few up-arrows to fix that!) but: 1) Japan sought Japanese-blood Brazilians to come back to Japan for labor in the 1980s. I believe tens of thousands took part. 2) Millions have obviously returned to Israel. 3) Japanese came from Korea and Manchuria (and maybe Polynesia?) in prehistory, and 1900-1940 many Japanese moved back there as conquerors. 4) I think North Africans came not from Sub-Saharan Africa but from Arabia (came back to same continent, though not same place.) 5) white South Africans ditto.
    – Swiss Frank
    Dec 15 at 19:39
















24














In addition to Lars Bosteen's answer about modern migration, several hundred thousand South American people have migrated to Spain in the last decades, and Brazilians have became the largest group of foreigners in Portugal. Other European countries with fewer ties and common background with America seem to host smaller populations.



Furthermore, if the "native-americans" tag in the question means that the OP is more interested in migration of descendants of native Americans than migration of Americans of European descent, the migration of Ecuadorians to Spain may qualify as the largest trans-Atlantic migration of people of native American or mixed descent.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    @reirab - Fixed. Thank you for pointing.
    – Pere
    Dec 14 at 14:53










  • I don't have the rep on History to submit an answer to a protected question. (Toss me a few up-arrows to fix that!) but: 1) Japan sought Japanese-blood Brazilians to come back to Japan for labor in the 1980s. I believe tens of thousands took part. 2) Millions have obviously returned to Israel. 3) Japanese came from Korea and Manchuria (and maybe Polynesia?) in prehistory, and 1900-1940 many Japanese moved back there as conquerors. 4) I think North Africans came not from Sub-Saharan Africa but from Arabia (came back to same continent, though not same place.) 5) white South Africans ditto.
    – Swiss Frank
    Dec 15 at 19:39














24












24








24






In addition to Lars Bosteen's answer about modern migration, several hundred thousand South American people have migrated to Spain in the last decades, and Brazilians have became the largest group of foreigners in Portugal. Other European countries with fewer ties and common background with America seem to host smaller populations.



Furthermore, if the "native-americans" tag in the question means that the OP is more interested in migration of descendants of native Americans than migration of Americans of European descent, the migration of Ecuadorians to Spain may qualify as the largest trans-Atlantic migration of people of native American or mixed descent.






share|improve this answer














In addition to Lars Bosteen's answer about modern migration, several hundred thousand South American people have migrated to Spain in the last decades, and Brazilians have became the largest group of foreigners in Portugal. Other European countries with fewer ties and common background with America seem to host smaller populations.



Furthermore, if the "native-americans" tag in the question means that the OP is more interested in migration of descendants of native Americans than migration of Americans of European descent, the migration of Ecuadorians to Spain may qualify as the largest trans-Atlantic migration of people of native American or mixed descent.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 14 at 14:53

























answered Dec 11 at 15:14









Pere

1,843615




1,843615








  • 1




    @reirab - Fixed. Thank you for pointing.
    – Pere
    Dec 14 at 14:53










  • I don't have the rep on History to submit an answer to a protected question. (Toss me a few up-arrows to fix that!) but: 1) Japan sought Japanese-blood Brazilians to come back to Japan for labor in the 1980s. I believe tens of thousands took part. 2) Millions have obviously returned to Israel. 3) Japanese came from Korea and Manchuria (and maybe Polynesia?) in prehistory, and 1900-1940 many Japanese moved back there as conquerors. 4) I think North Africans came not from Sub-Saharan Africa but from Arabia (came back to same continent, though not same place.) 5) white South Africans ditto.
    – Swiss Frank
    Dec 15 at 19:39














  • 1




    @reirab - Fixed. Thank you for pointing.
    – Pere
    Dec 14 at 14:53










  • I don't have the rep on History to submit an answer to a protected question. (Toss me a few up-arrows to fix that!) but: 1) Japan sought Japanese-blood Brazilians to come back to Japan for labor in the 1980s. I believe tens of thousands took part. 2) Millions have obviously returned to Israel. 3) Japanese came from Korea and Manchuria (and maybe Polynesia?) in prehistory, and 1900-1940 many Japanese moved back there as conquerors. 4) I think North Africans came not from Sub-Saharan Africa but from Arabia (came back to same continent, though not same place.) 5) white South Africans ditto.
    – Swiss Frank
    Dec 15 at 19:39








1




1




@reirab - Fixed. Thank you for pointing.
– Pere
Dec 14 at 14:53




@reirab - Fixed. Thank you for pointing.
– Pere
Dec 14 at 14:53












I don't have the rep on History to submit an answer to a protected question. (Toss me a few up-arrows to fix that!) but: 1) Japan sought Japanese-blood Brazilians to come back to Japan for labor in the 1980s. I believe tens of thousands took part. 2) Millions have obviously returned to Israel. 3) Japanese came from Korea and Manchuria (and maybe Polynesia?) in prehistory, and 1900-1940 many Japanese moved back there as conquerors. 4) I think North Africans came not from Sub-Saharan Africa but from Arabia (came back to same continent, though not same place.) 5) white South Africans ditto.
– Swiss Frank
Dec 15 at 19:39




I don't have the rep on History to submit an answer to a protected question. (Toss me a few up-arrows to fix that!) but: 1) Japan sought Japanese-blood Brazilians to come back to Japan for labor in the 1980s. I believe tens of thousands took part. 2) Millions have obviously returned to Israel. 3) Japanese came from Korea and Manchuria (and maybe Polynesia?) in prehistory, and 1900-1940 many Japanese moved back there as conquerors. 4) I think North Africans came not from Sub-Saharan Africa but from Arabia (came back to same continent, though not same place.) 5) white South Africans ditto.
– Swiss Frank
Dec 15 at 19:39











9














Horses evolved on the North American landmass, emigrated across the Bering land bridge, then went extinct in the Americas.






share|improve this answer

















  • 10




    While interesting, I believe this question is concerned with human migration.
    – GreySage
    Dec 11 at 18:32






  • 2




    @GreySage Perhaps there is coyote wisdom and historical satire to be found in the answer. Consider A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift.
    – guest271314
    Dec 11 at 18:48








  • 1




    Really? Why did they go extinct? There's no predators. They are faster than bears.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:45






  • 3




    @Chloe Horses went extinct in North America as part of the extinction of many species at the end of the Pleistocene, when there was a global cooling event. As well as the vegetation changing rapidly, the end of the Pleistocene is also saw a major new predator arrive in the Americas: man. This was when the woolly mammoth, American camels, dire wolves, short-faced bears, saber-toothed cats, stag-moose, woolly rhinos and giant ground sloths became extinct.
    – Martin Bonner
    Dec 14 at 15:50












  • @MartinBonner Wait, dire wolves were real? Does that mean shadow cats were real too? So sad that people decided to eat horses instead of ride them like the rest of the world.
    – Chloe
    Dec 14 at 23:15
















9














Horses evolved on the North American landmass, emigrated across the Bering land bridge, then went extinct in the Americas.






share|improve this answer

















  • 10




    While interesting, I believe this question is concerned with human migration.
    – GreySage
    Dec 11 at 18:32






  • 2




    @GreySage Perhaps there is coyote wisdom and historical satire to be found in the answer. Consider A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift.
    – guest271314
    Dec 11 at 18:48








  • 1




    Really? Why did they go extinct? There's no predators. They are faster than bears.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:45






  • 3




    @Chloe Horses went extinct in North America as part of the extinction of many species at the end of the Pleistocene, when there was a global cooling event. As well as the vegetation changing rapidly, the end of the Pleistocene is also saw a major new predator arrive in the Americas: man. This was when the woolly mammoth, American camels, dire wolves, short-faced bears, saber-toothed cats, stag-moose, woolly rhinos and giant ground sloths became extinct.
    – Martin Bonner
    Dec 14 at 15:50












  • @MartinBonner Wait, dire wolves were real? Does that mean shadow cats were real too? So sad that people decided to eat horses instead of ride them like the rest of the world.
    – Chloe
    Dec 14 at 23:15














9












9








9






Horses evolved on the North American landmass, emigrated across the Bering land bridge, then went extinct in the Americas.






share|improve this answer












Horses evolved on the North American landmass, emigrated across the Bering land bridge, then went extinct in the Americas.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 11 at 18:15









rhw3h

991




991








  • 10




    While interesting, I believe this question is concerned with human migration.
    – GreySage
    Dec 11 at 18:32






  • 2




    @GreySage Perhaps there is coyote wisdom and historical satire to be found in the answer. Consider A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift.
    – guest271314
    Dec 11 at 18:48








  • 1




    Really? Why did they go extinct? There's no predators. They are faster than bears.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:45






  • 3




    @Chloe Horses went extinct in North America as part of the extinction of many species at the end of the Pleistocene, when there was a global cooling event. As well as the vegetation changing rapidly, the end of the Pleistocene is also saw a major new predator arrive in the Americas: man. This was when the woolly mammoth, American camels, dire wolves, short-faced bears, saber-toothed cats, stag-moose, woolly rhinos and giant ground sloths became extinct.
    – Martin Bonner
    Dec 14 at 15:50












  • @MartinBonner Wait, dire wolves were real? Does that mean shadow cats were real too? So sad that people decided to eat horses instead of ride them like the rest of the world.
    – Chloe
    Dec 14 at 23:15














  • 10




    While interesting, I believe this question is concerned with human migration.
    – GreySage
    Dec 11 at 18:32






  • 2




    @GreySage Perhaps there is coyote wisdom and historical satire to be found in the answer. Consider A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift.
    – guest271314
    Dec 11 at 18:48








  • 1




    Really? Why did they go extinct? There's no predators. They are faster than bears.
    – Chloe
    Dec 13 at 19:45






  • 3




    @Chloe Horses went extinct in North America as part of the extinction of many species at the end of the Pleistocene, when there was a global cooling event. As well as the vegetation changing rapidly, the end of the Pleistocene is also saw a major new predator arrive in the Americas: man. This was when the woolly mammoth, American camels, dire wolves, short-faced bears, saber-toothed cats, stag-moose, woolly rhinos and giant ground sloths became extinct.
    – Martin Bonner
    Dec 14 at 15:50












  • @MartinBonner Wait, dire wolves were real? Does that mean shadow cats were real too? So sad that people decided to eat horses instead of ride them like the rest of the world.
    – Chloe
    Dec 14 at 23:15








10




10




While interesting, I believe this question is concerned with human migration.
– GreySage
Dec 11 at 18:32




While interesting, I believe this question is concerned with human migration.
– GreySage
Dec 11 at 18:32




2




2




@GreySage Perhaps there is coyote wisdom and historical satire to be found in the answer. Consider A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift.
– guest271314
Dec 11 at 18:48






@GreySage Perhaps there is coyote wisdom and historical satire to be found in the answer. Consider A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift.
– guest271314
Dec 11 at 18:48






1




1




Really? Why did they go extinct? There's no predators. They are faster than bears.
– Chloe
Dec 13 at 19:45




Really? Why did they go extinct? There's no predators. They are faster than bears.
– Chloe
Dec 13 at 19:45




3




3




@Chloe Horses went extinct in North America as part of the extinction of many species at the end of the Pleistocene, when there was a global cooling event. As well as the vegetation changing rapidly, the end of the Pleistocene is also saw a major new predator arrive in the Americas: man. This was when the woolly mammoth, American camels, dire wolves, short-faced bears, saber-toothed cats, stag-moose, woolly rhinos and giant ground sloths became extinct.
– Martin Bonner
Dec 14 at 15:50






@Chloe Horses went extinct in North America as part of the extinction of many species at the end of the Pleistocene, when there was a global cooling event. As well as the vegetation changing rapidly, the end of the Pleistocene is also saw a major new predator arrive in the Americas: man. This was when the woolly mammoth, American camels, dire wolves, short-faced bears, saber-toothed cats, stag-moose, woolly rhinos and giant ground sloths became extinct.
– Martin Bonner
Dec 14 at 15:50














@MartinBonner Wait, dire wolves were real? Does that mean shadow cats were real too? So sad that people decided to eat horses instead of ride them like the rest of the world.
– Chloe
Dec 14 at 23:15




@MartinBonner Wait, dire wolves were real? Does that mean shadow cats were real too? So sad that people decided to eat horses instead of ride them like the rest of the world.
– Chloe
Dec 14 at 23:15











4














The question is tagged native-americans and alaska though uses the term new-world, which is a purely Eurocentric perspective. Also, it is not immediately clear what "Old World" means in regards to locales other than Europe proper; or if the question is focused on actual Native Americans or individuals and institutions who invaded Turtle Island and now claim the geography as their own by right of conquest. It must also be noted here that Native American prisoners of war (commonly referred to as "slaves") were shipped to Europe from the "New World" prior to the abolition of "slavery" in the "New World"; which is not migration, but rather a tactic of war to seize and control the land of the original people in the "New World"; i.e.g., see Colonists shipped Native Americans abroad as slaves by Gillian Kiley-Brown




While natives had been forced into slavery and servitude as early as
1636, it was not until King Philip’s War that natives were enslaved in
large numbers, Fisher writes in the study. The 1675 to 1676 war pitted
Native American leader King Philip, also known as Metacom, and his
allies against the English colonial settlers.



During the war, New England colonies routinely shipped Native
Americans as slaves to Barbados, Bermuda, Jamaica, the Azores, Spain,
and Tangier in North Africa, Fisher says.




Have inquired into why people of European descent do not migrate or "caravan" back to Europe en masse. The conclusion that have drawn is that the conditions which precipitated mass departure from Europe between 1500 and 1900 still exist; and people who claim to be of European descent in the "New World" actually have little interest in returning to the lands and culture they claim by virtue of purported ancestral lineage or "origin", as the evidence supports.



People who claim to be "Jew" do more frequently migrate to Isreal which could be considered "Old World", unless, again by the term "Old World" the question refers to only regions of Europe proper, or euphemistically; that is, the question does not present definitive nations or geographic locations specifying precisely where "Old World" supposedly begins or concludes, certainly not from the perspective of individuals who do not self-identify as "European"; or if such notions of "Old World" exist primarily as nostalgia in individuals' minds who claim to be of European descent, as an expression of Eurocentrism, negating the fact that "Old World" could also be applicable to "Africa" or "Australia", et al.; as the designation "Old World" is not commonly found on any map.



In any event, see Aliyah




(US: /ˌæliˈɑː/, UK: /ˌɑː-/; Hebrew: עֲלִיָּה‬ aliyah, "ascent") is
the immigration of Jews from the diaspora to the Land of Israel (Eretz
Israel in Hebrew). Also defined as "the act of going up"—that is,
towards Jerusalem—"making Aliyah" by moving to the Land of Israel is
one of the most basic tenets of Zionism.







Aliyah from Latin America



In the 1999–2002 Argentine political and economic crisis that caused a
run on the banks, wiped out billions of dollars in deposits and
decimated Argentina's middle class, most of the country's estimated
200,000 Jews were directly affected. Some 4,400 chose to start over
and move to Israel, where they saw opportunity.



More than 10,000 Argentine Jews immigrated to Israel since 2000,
joining the thousands of previous Argentine immigrants already there.
The crisis in Argentina also affected its neighbour country Uruguay,
from which about half of its 40,000-strong Jewish community left,
mainly to Israel, in the same period. During 2002 and 2003 the Jewish
Agency for Israel launched an intensive public campaign to promote
aliyah from the region, and offered additional economic aid for
immigrants from Argentina. Although the economy of Argentina improved,
and some who had immigrated to Israel from Argentina moved back
following South American country's economic growth from 2003 onwards,
Argentine Jews continue to immigrate to Israel, albeit in smaller
numbers than before. The Argentine community in Israel is about
50,000-70,000 people, the largest Latin American group in the country.



There has also been immigration from other Latin American countries
that have experienced crises, though they have come in smaller numbers
and are not eligible for the same economic benefits as immigrants to
Israel from Argentina.



In Venezuela, growing antisemitism in the country, including
antisemitic violence, caused an increasing number of Jews to move to
Israel during the 2000s. For the first time in Venezuelan history,
Jews began leaving for Israel in the hundreds. By November 2010, more
than half of Venezuela's 20,000-strong Jewish community had left the
country.51, 52







Aliyah from North America



More than 200,000 North American immigrants live in Israel. There has
been a steady flow of immigration from North America since Israel’s
inception in 1948.82, 83



Several thousand American Jews moved to Mandate Palestine before the
State of Israel was established. From Israel's establishment in 1948
to the Six-Day War in 1967, aliyah from the United States and Canada
was minimal. In 1959, a former President of the Association of
Americans and Canadians in Israel estimated that out of the 35,000
American and Canadian Jews who had made aliyah, only 6,000
remained.84



Following the Six-Day War in 1967, and the subsequent euphoria among
world Jewry, significant numbers arrived in the late 1960s and 1970s,
whereas it had been a mere trickle before. Between 1967 and 1973,
60,000 North American Jews immigrated to Israel. However, many of them
later returned to their original countries. An estimated 58% of
American Jews who immigrated to Israel between 1961 and 1972 ended up
returning to the United States.85, 86



Like Western European immigrants, North Americans tend to immigrate to
Israel more for religious, ideological, and political purposes, and
not financial or security ones.87 Many immigrants
began arriving in Israel after the First and Second Intifada, with a
total of 3,052 arriving in 2005 — the highest number since
1983.88



Nefesh B'Nefesh, founded in 2002 by Rabbi Yehoshua Fass and Tony
Gelbart, works to encourage Aliyah from North America and the UK by
providing financial assistance, employment services and streamlined
governmental procedures. Nefesh B’Nefesh works in cooperation with the
Jewish Agency and the Israeli Government in increasing the numbers of
North American and British immigrants.



Following the Global Financial Crisis in the late 2000s, American
Jewish immigration to Israel rose. This wave of immigration was
triggered by Israel's lower unemployment rate, combined with financial
incentives offered to new Jewish immigrants. In 2009, aliyah was at
its highest in 36 years, with 3,324 North American Jews making
aliyah.89










share|improve this answer



















  • 5




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Dec 11 at 18:53
















4














The question is tagged native-americans and alaska though uses the term new-world, which is a purely Eurocentric perspective. Also, it is not immediately clear what "Old World" means in regards to locales other than Europe proper; or if the question is focused on actual Native Americans or individuals and institutions who invaded Turtle Island and now claim the geography as their own by right of conquest. It must also be noted here that Native American prisoners of war (commonly referred to as "slaves") were shipped to Europe from the "New World" prior to the abolition of "slavery" in the "New World"; which is not migration, but rather a tactic of war to seize and control the land of the original people in the "New World"; i.e.g., see Colonists shipped Native Americans abroad as slaves by Gillian Kiley-Brown




While natives had been forced into slavery and servitude as early as
1636, it was not until King Philip’s War that natives were enslaved in
large numbers, Fisher writes in the study. The 1675 to 1676 war pitted
Native American leader King Philip, also known as Metacom, and his
allies against the English colonial settlers.



During the war, New England colonies routinely shipped Native
Americans as slaves to Barbados, Bermuda, Jamaica, the Azores, Spain,
and Tangier in North Africa, Fisher says.




Have inquired into why people of European descent do not migrate or "caravan" back to Europe en masse. The conclusion that have drawn is that the conditions which precipitated mass departure from Europe between 1500 and 1900 still exist; and people who claim to be of European descent in the "New World" actually have little interest in returning to the lands and culture they claim by virtue of purported ancestral lineage or "origin", as the evidence supports.



People who claim to be "Jew" do more frequently migrate to Isreal which could be considered "Old World", unless, again by the term "Old World" the question refers to only regions of Europe proper, or euphemistically; that is, the question does not present definitive nations or geographic locations specifying precisely where "Old World" supposedly begins or concludes, certainly not from the perspective of individuals who do not self-identify as "European"; or if such notions of "Old World" exist primarily as nostalgia in individuals' minds who claim to be of European descent, as an expression of Eurocentrism, negating the fact that "Old World" could also be applicable to "Africa" or "Australia", et al.; as the designation "Old World" is not commonly found on any map.



In any event, see Aliyah




(US: /ˌæliˈɑː/, UK: /ˌɑː-/; Hebrew: עֲלִיָּה‬ aliyah, "ascent") is
the immigration of Jews from the diaspora to the Land of Israel (Eretz
Israel in Hebrew). Also defined as "the act of going up"—that is,
towards Jerusalem—"making Aliyah" by moving to the Land of Israel is
one of the most basic tenets of Zionism.







Aliyah from Latin America



In the 1999–2002 Argentine political and economic crisis that caused a
run on the banks, wiped out billions of dollars in deposits and
decimated Argentina's middle class, most of the country's estimated
200,000 Jews were directly affected. Some 4,400 chose to start over
and move to Israel, where they saw opportunity.



More than 10,000 Argentine Jews immigrated to Israel since 2000,
joining the thousands of previous Argentine immigrants already there.
The crisis in Argentina also affected its neighbour country Uruguay,
from which about half of its 40,000-strong Jewish community left,
mainly to Israel, in the same period. During 2002 and 2003 the Jewish
Agency for Israel launched an intensive public campaign to promote
aliyah from the region, and offered additional economic aid for
immigrants from Argentina. Although the economy of Argentina improved,
and some who had immigrated to Israel from Argentina moved back
following South American country's economic growth from 2003 onwards,
Argentine Jews continue to immigrate to Israel, albeit in smaller
numbers than before. The Argentine community in Israel is about
50,000-70,000 people, the largest Latin American group in the country.



There has also been immigration from other Latin American countries
that have experienced crises, though they have come in smaller numbers
and are not eligible for the same economic benefits as immigrants to
Israel from Argentina.



In Venezuela, growing antisemitism in the country, including
antisemitic violence, caused an increasing number of Jews to move to
Israel during the 2000s. For the first time in Venezuelan history,
Jews began leaving for Israel in the hundreds. By November 2010, more
than half of Venezuela's 20,000-strong Jewish community had left the
country.51, 52







Aliyah from North America



More than 200,000 North American immigrants live in Israel. There has
been a steady flow of immigration from North America since Israel’s
inception in 1948.82, 83



Several thousand American Jews moved to Mandate Palestine before the
State of Israel was established. From Israel's establishment in 1948
to the Six-Day War in 1967, aliyah from the United States and Canada
was minimal. In 1959, a former President of the Association of
Americans and Canadians in Israel estimated that out of the 35,000
American and Canadian Jews who had made aliyah, only 6,000
remained.84



Following the Six-Day War in 1967, and the subsequent euphoria among
world Jewry, significant numbers arrived in the late 1960s and 1970s,
whereas it had been a mere trickle before. Between 1967 and 1973,
60,000 North American Jews immigrated to Israel. However, many of them
later returned to their original countries. An estimated 58% of
American Jews who immigrated to Israel between 1961 and 1972 ended up
returning to the United States.85, 86



Like Western European immigrants, North Americans tend to immigrate to
Israel more for religious, ideological, and political purposes, and
not financial or security ones.87 Many immigrants
began arriving in Israel after the First and Second Intifada, with a
total of 3,052 arriving in 2005 — the highest number since
1983.88



Nefesh B'Nefesh, founded in 2002 by Rabbi Yehoshua Fass and Tony
Gelbart, works to encourage Aliyah from North America and the UK by
providing financial assistance, employment services and streamlined
governmental procedures. Nefesh B’Nefesh works in cooperation with the
Jewish Agency and the Israeli Government in increasing the numbers of
North American and British immigrants.



Following the Global Financial Crisis in the late 2000s, American
Jewish immigration to Israel rose. This wave of immigration was
triggered by Israel's lower unemployment rate, combined with financial
incentives offered to new Jewish immigrants. In 2009, aliyah was at
its highest in 36 years, with 3,324 North American Jews making
aliyah.89










share|improve this answer



















  • 5




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Dec 11 at 18:53














4












4








4






The question is tagged native-americans and alaska though uses the term new-world, which is a purely Eurocentric perspective. Also, it is not immediately clear what "Old World" means in regards to locales other than Europe proper; or if the question is focused on actual Native Americans or individuals and institutions who invaded Turtle Island and now claim the geography as their own by right of conquest. It must also be noted here that Native American prisoners of war (commonly referred to as "slaves") were shipped to Europe from the "New World" prior to the abolition of "slavery" in the "New World"; which is not migration, but rather a tactic of war to seize and control the land of the original people in the "New World"; i.e.g., see Colonists shipped Native Americans abroad as slaves by Gillian Kiley-Brown




While natives had been forced into slavery and servitude as early as
1636, it was not until King Philip’s War that natives were enslaved in
large numbers, Fisher writes in the study. The 1675 to 1676 war pitted
Native American leader King Philip, also known as Metacom, and his
allies against the English colonial settlers.



During the war, New England colonies routinely shipped Native
Americans as slaves to Barbados, Bermuda, Jamaica, the Azores, Spain,
and Tangier in North Africa, Fisher says.




Have inquired into why people of European descent do not migrate or "caravan" back to Europe en masse. The conclusion that have drawn is that the conditions which precipitated mass departure from Europe between 1500 and 1900 still exist; and people who claim to be of European descent in the "New World" actually have little interest in returning to the lands and culture they claim by virtue of purported ancestral lineage or "origin", as the evidence supports.



People who claim to be "Jew" do more frequently migrate to Isreal which could be considered "Old World", unless, again by the term "Old World" the question refers to only regions of Europe proper, or euphemistically; that is, the question does not present definitive nations or geographic locations specifying precisely where "Old World" supposedly begins or concludes, certainly not from the perspective of individuals who do not self-identify as "European"; or if such notions of "Old World" exist primarily as nostalgia in individuals' minds who claim to be of European descent, as an expression of Eurocentrism, negating the fact that "Old World" could also be applicable to "Africa" or "Australia", et al.; as the designation "Old World" is not commonly found on any map.



In any event, see Aliyah




(US: /ˌæliˈɑː/, UK: /ˌɑː-/; Hebrew: עֲלִיָּה‬ aliyah, "ascent") is
the immigration of Jews from the diaspora to the Land of Israel (Eretz
Israel in Hebrew). Also defined as "the act of going up"—that is,
towards Jerusalem—"making Aliyah" by moving to the Land of Israel is
one of the most basic tenets of Zionism.







Aliyah from Latin America



In the 1999–2002 Argentine political and economic crisis that caused a
run on the banks, wiped out billions of dollars in deposits and
decimated Argentina's middle class, most of the country's estimated
200,000 Jews were directly affected. Some 4,400 chose to start over
and move to Israel, where they saw opportunity.



More than 10,000 Argentine Jews immigrated to Israel since 2000,
joining the thousands of previous Argentine immigrants already there.
The crisis in Argentina also affected its neighbour country Uruguay,
from which about half of its 40,000-strong Jewish community left,
mainly to Israel, in the same period. During 2002 and 2003 the Jewish
Agency for Israel launched an intensive public campaign to promote
aliyah from the region, and offered additional economic aid for
immigrants from Argentina. Although the economy of Argentina improved,
and some who had immigrated to Israel from Argentina moved back
following South American country's economic growth from 2003 onwards,
Argentine Jews continue to immigrate to Israel, albeit in smaller
numbers than before. The Argentine community in Israel is about
50,000-70,000 people, the largest Latin American group in the country.



There has also been immigration from other Latin American countries
that have experienced crises, though they have come in smaller numbers
and are not eligible for the same economic benefits as immigrants to
Israel from Argentina.



In Venezuela, growing antisemitism in the country, including
antisemitic violence, caused an increasing number of Jews to move to
Israel during the 2000s. For the first time in Venezuelan history,
Jews began leaving for Israel in the hundreds. By November 2010, more
than half of Venezuela's 20,000-strong Jewish community had left the
country.51, 52







Aliyah from North America



More than 200,000 North American immigrants live in Israel. There has
been a steady flow of immigration from North America since Israel’s
inception in 1948.82, 83



Several thousand American Jews moved to Mandate Palestine before the
State of Israel was established. From Israel's establishment in 1948
to the Six-Day War in 1967, aliyah from the United States and Canada
was minimal. In 1959, a former President of the Association of
Americans and Canadians in Israel estimated that out of the 35,000
American and Canadian Jews who had made aliyah, only 6,000
remained.84



Following the Six-Day War in 1967, and the subsequent euphoria among
world Jewry, significant numbers arrived in the late 1960s and 1970s,
whereas it had been a mere trickle before. Between 1967 and 1973,
60,000 North American Jews immigrated to Israel. However, many of them
later returned to their original countries. An estimated 58% of
American Jews who immigrated to Israel between 1961 and 1972 ended up
returning to the United States.85, 86



Like Western European immigrants, North Americans tend to immigrate to
Israel more for religious, ideological, and political purposes, and
not financial or security ones.87 Many immigrants
began arriving in Israel after the First and Second Intifada, with a
total of 3,052 arriving in 2005 — the highest number since
1983.88



Nefesh B'Nefesh, founded in 2002 by Rabbi Yehoshua Fass and Tony
Gelbart, works to encourage Aliyah from North America and the UK by
providing financial assistance, employment services and streamlined
governmental procedures. Nefesh B’Nefesh works in cooperation with the
Jewish Agency and the Israeli Government in increasing the numbers of
North American and British immigrants.



Following the Global Financial Crisis in the late 2000s, American
Jewish immigration to Israel rose. This wave of immigration was
triggered by Israel's lower unemployment rate, combined with financial
incentives offered to new Jewish immigrants. In 2009, aliyah was at
its highest in 36 years, with 3,324 North American Jews making
aliyah.89










share|improve this answer














The question is tagged native-americans and alaska though uses the term new-world, which is a purely Eurocentric perspective. Also, it is not immediately clear what "Old World" means in regards to locales other than Europe proper; or if the question is focused on actual Native Americans or individuals and institutions who invaded Turtle Island and now claim the geography as their own by right of conquest. It must also be noted here that Native American prisoners of war (commonly referred to as "slaves") were shipped to Europe from the "New World" prior to the abolition of "slavery" in the "New World"; which is not migration, but rather a tactic of war to seize and control the land of the original people in the "New World"; i.e.g., see Colonists shipped Native Americans abroad as slaves by Gillian Kiley-Brown




While natives had been forced into slavery and servitude as early as
1636, it was not until King Philip’s War that natives were enslaved in
large numbers, Fisher writes in the study. The 1675 to 1676 war pitted
Native American leader King Philip, also known as Metacom, and his
allies against the English colonial settlers.



During the war, New England colonies routinely shipped Native
Americans as slaves to Barbados, Bermuda, Jamaica, the Azores, Spain,
and Tangier in North Africa, Fisher says.




Have inquired into why people of European descent do not migrate or "caravan" back to Europe en masse. The conclusion that have drawn is that the conditions which precipitated mass departure from Europe between 1500 and 1900 still exist; and people who claim to be of European descent in the "New World" actually have little interest in returning to the lands and culture they claim by virtue of purported ancestral lineage or "origin", as the evidence supports.



People who claim to be "Jew" do more frequently migrate to Isreal which could be considered "Old World", unless, again by the term "Old World" the question refers to only regions of Europe proper, or euphemistically; that is, the question does not present definitive nations or geographic locations specifying precisely where "Old World" supposedly begins or concludes, certainly not from the perspective of individuals who do not self-identify as "European"; or if such notions of "Old World" exist primarily as nostalgia in individuals' minds who claim to be of European descent, as an expression of Eurocentrism, negating the fact that "Old World" could also be applicable to "Africa" or "Australia", et al.; as the designation "Old World" is not commonly found on any map.



In any event, see Aliyah




(US: /ˌæliˈɑː/, UK: /ˌɑː-/; Hebrew: עֲלִיָּה‬ aliyah, "ascent") is
the immigration of Jews from the diaspora to the Land of Israel (Eretz
Israel in Hebrew). Also defined as "the act of going up"—that is,
towards Jerusalem—"making Aliyah" by moving to the Land of Israel is
one of the most basic tenets of Zionism.







Aliyah from Latin America



In the 1999–2002 Argentine political and economic crisis that caused a
run on the banks, wiped out billions of dollars in deposits and
decimated Argentina's middle class, most of the country's estimated
200,000 Jews were directly affected. Some 4,400 chose to start over
and move to Israel, where they saw opportunity.



More than 10,000 Argentine Jews immigrated to Israel since 2000,
joining the thousands of previous Argentine immigrants already there.
The crisis in Argentina also affected its neighbour country Uruguay,
from which about half of its 40,000-strong Jewish community left,
mainly to Israel, in the same period. During 2002 and 2003 the Jewish
Agency for Israel launched an intensive public campaign to promote
aliyah from the region, and offered additional economic aid for
immigrants from Argentina. Although the economy of Argentina improved,
and some who had immigrated to Israel from Argentina moved back
following South American country's economic growth from 2003 onwards,
Argentine Jews continue to immigrate to Israel, albeit in smaller
numbers than before. The Argentine community in Israel is about
50,000-70,000 people, the largest Latin American group in the country.



There has also been immigration from other Latin American countries
that have experienced crises, though they have come in smaller numbers
and are not eligible for the same economic benefits as immigrants to
Israel from Argentina.



In Venezuela, growing antisemitism in the country, including
antisemitic violence, caused an increasing number of Jews to move to
Israel during the 2000s. For the first time in Venezuelan history,
Jews began leaving for Israel in the hundreds. By November 2010, more
than half of Venezuela's 20,000-strong Jewish community had left the
country.51, 52







Aliyah from North America



More than 200,000 North American immigrants live in Israel. There has
been a steady flow of immigration from North America since Israel’s
inception in 1948.82, 83



Several thousand American Jews moved to Mandate Palestine before the
State of Israel was established. From Israel's establishment in 1948
to the Six-Day War in 1967, aliyah from the United States and Canada
was minimal. In 1959, a former President of the Association of
Americans and Canadians in Israel estimated that out of the 35,000
American and Canadian Jews who had made aliyah, only 6,000
remained.84



Following the Six-Day War in 1967, and the subsequent euphoria among
world Jewry, significant numbers arrived in the late 1960s and 1970s,
whereas it had been a mere trickle before. Between 1967 and 1973,
60,000 North American Jews immigrated to Israel. However, many of them
later returned to their original countries. An estimated 58% of
American Jews who immigrated to Israel between 1961 and 1972 ended up
returning to the United States.85, 86



Like Western European immigrants, North Americans tend to immigrate to
Israel more for religious, ideological, and political purposes, and
not financial or security ones.87 Many immigrants
began arriving in Israel after the First and Second Intifada, with a
total of 3,052 arriving in 2005 — the highest number since
1983.88



Nefesh B'Nefesh, founded in 2002 by Rabbi Yehoshua Fass and Tony
Gelbart, works to encourage Aliyah from North America and the UK by
providing financial assistance, employment services and streamlined
governmental procedures. Nefesh B’Nefesh works in cooperation with the
Jewish Agency and the Israeli Government in increasing the numbers of
North American and British immigrants.



Following the Global Financial Crisis in the late 2000s, American
Jewish immigration to Israel rose. This wave of immigration was
triggered by Israel's lower unemployment rate, combined with financial
incentives offered to new Jewish immigrants. In 2009, aliyah was at
its highest in 36 years, with 3,324 North American Jews making
aliyah.89











share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 11 at 15:55

























answered Dec 11 at 15:27









guest271314

1




1








  • 5




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Dec 11 at 18:53














  • 5




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark C. Wallace
    Dec 11 at 18:53








5




5




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark C. Wallace
Dec 11 at 18:53




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Mark C. Wallace
Dec 11 at 18:53











0














As to "why": Unforced migration is opportunistic. Moving somewhere else is risky and requires effort so that a degree of suffering at the current location or at least a substantial promise of improvement at the target location is needed to start a migration.



Prominent examples are the Irish famine or the Californian gold rush. More generally, the migration of Europeans which was not the direct result of religious prosecution and famines was motivated by perceived opportunities abroad which were not present at home.



Some of the opportunities were social — the feudalistic, strictly organized societies of the 17th and 18th century were severely regulating the lives of the common people while the founding document of the United States explicitly stated that "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" were "inherent and inalienable rights" of man.



More direct, materialistic opportunities were present in the abundance of natural resources, mostly land, which is attractive to members of pre-industrial societies in full possession of their abilities (chiefly young, adventurous, energetic people).1



With this analysis we can predict that the direction of migration may reverse when opportunities in the Americas appear much worse than in Europe. An aging and shrinking European population may generate attractive job and housing opportunities, and bad governance in the Americas (including the U.S., if you look at it) may decrease opportunities there. As others have remarked such a trend can already be observed.






1 As an aside, I can observe some traits of people most likely to emigrate from Europe — e.g. being religious, entrepreneurial, adventurous, optimistic and energetic — in America still today, while they sometimes seem to lack in Europe.




share|improve this answer























  • Sources might improve this answer. // Your footnote is regurgitating myths, and quite a few of them mixed. If you take these assertions to a structural perspective, it all disaapears. Small scale example: Go to a bad neighbourhood in N or S America, then compare that to quarters that are just starting gentrification anywhere in Europe. There are no essentialist differences in traits of people compared, but economic and cultural factors of quite some significance if you want to look at it at this macro-level.
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 14:54












  • @LangLangCn Yes, sources would most certainly improve the answer. Anybody? // I made the observation of traits personally with American acquiantances; it's quite obvious but only anecdotal, so I edited the footnote to make that clear.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:03












  • But that observation is anecdotal evidence and from a highly biased sample and formed via your own bias/expectations. Far from a reliable fact. –– On the other hand, add these caveats and it becomes reasonable observation (in fact one often heard), instantly. ;)
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 15:06






  • 1




    @LangLangC Another remark to sources: The facts (need for motivation to migrate, social norms, abundance of resources, Declaration of Independence) are obvious and undisputed; the conclusions are all mine and seem fairly obvious. The merit of my answer (if any) is to structure them and sum them up.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:12


















0














As to "why": Unforced migration is opportunistic. Moving somewhere else is risky and requires effort so that a degree of suffering at the current location or at least a substantial promise of improvement at the target location is needed to start a migration.



Prominent examples are the Irish famine or the Californian gold rush. More generally, the migration of Europeans which was not the direct result of religious prosecution and famines was motivated by perceived opportunities abroad which were not present at home.



Some of the opportunities were social — the feudalistic, strictly organized societies of the 17th and 18th century were severely regulating the lives of the common people while the founding document of the United States explicitly stated that "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" were "inherent and inalienable rights" of man.



More direct, materialistic opportunities were present in the abundance of natural resources, mostly land, which is attractive to members of pre-industrial societies in full possession of their abilities (chiefly young, adventurous, energetic people).1



With this analysis we can predict that the direction of migration may reverse when opportunities in the Americas appear much worse than in Europe. An aging and shrinking European population may generate attractive job and housing opportunities, and bad governance in the Americas (including the U.S., if you look at it) may decrease opportunities there. As others have remarked such a trend can already be observed.






1 As an aside, I can observe some traits of people most likely to emigrate from Europe — e.g. being religious, entrepreneurial, adventurous, optimistic and energetic — in America still today, while they sometimes seem to lack in Europe.




share|improve this answer























  • Sources might improve this answer. // Your footnote is regurgitating myths, and quite a few of them mixed. If you take these assertions to a structural perspective, it all disaapears. Small scale example: Go to a bad neighbourhood in N or S America, then compare that to quarters that are just starting gentrification anywhere in Europe. There are no essentialist differences in traits of people compared, but economic and cultural factors of quite some significance if you want to look at it at this macro-level.
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 14:54












  • @LangLangCn Yes, sources would most certainly improve the answer. Anybody? // I made the observation of traits personally with American acquiantances; it's quite obvious but only anecdotal, so I edited the footnote to make that clear.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:03












  • But that observation is anecdotal evidence and from a highly biased sample and formed via your own bias/expectations. Far from a reliable fact. –– On the other hand, add these caveats and it becomes reasonable observation (in fact one often heard), instantly. ;)
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 15:06






  • 1




    @LangLangC Another remark to sources: The facts (need for motivation to migrate, social norms, abundance of resources, Declaration of Independence) are obvious and undisputed; the conclusions are all mine and seem fairly obvious. The merit of my answer (if any) is to structure them and sum them up.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:12
















0












0








0






As to "why": Unforced migration is opportunistic. Moving somewhere else is risky and requires effort so that a degree of suffering at the current location or at least a substantial promise of improvement at the target location is needed to start a migration.



Prominent examples are the Irish famine or the Californian gold rush. More generally, the migration of Europeans which was not the direct result of religious prosecution and famines was motivated by perceived opportunities abroad which were not present at home.



Some of the opportunities were social — the feudalistic, strictly organized societies of the 17th and 18th century were severely regulating the lives of the common people while the founding document of the United States explicitly stated that "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" were "inherent and inalienable rights" of man.



More direct, materialistic opportunities were present in the abundance of natural resources, mostly land, which is attractive to members of pre-industrial societies in full possession of their abilities (chiefly young, adventurous, energetic people).1



With this analysis we can predict that the direction of migration may reverse when opportunities in the Americas appear much worse than in Europe. An aging and shrinking European population may generate attractive job and housing opportunities, and bad governance in the Americas (including the U.S., if you look at it) may decrease opportunities there. As others have remarked such a trend can already be observed.






1 As an aside, I can observe some traits of people most likely to emigrate from Europe — e.g. being religious, entrepreneurial, adventurous, optimistic and energetic — in America still today, while they sometimes seem to lack in Europe.




share|improve this answer














As to "why": Unforced migration is opportunistic. Moving somewhere else is risky and requires effort so that a degree of suffering at the current location or at least a substantial promise of improvement at the target location is needed to start a migration.



Prominent examples are the Irish famine or the Californian gold rush. More generally, the migration of Europeans which was not the direct result of religious prosecution and famines was motivated by perceived opportunities abroad which were not present at home.



Some of the opportunities were social — the feudalistic, strictly organized societies of the 17th and 18th century were severely regulating the lives of the common people while the founding document of the United States explicitly stated that "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" were "inherent and inalienable rights" of man.



More direct, materialistic opportunities were present in the abundance of natural resources, mostly land, which is attractive to members of pre-industrial societies in full possession of their abilities (chiefly young, adventurous, energetic people).1



With this analysis we can predict that the direction of migration may reverse when opportunities in the Americas appear much worse than in Europe. An aging and shrinking European population may generate attractive job and housing opportunities, and bad governance in the Americas (including the U.S., if you look at it) may decrease opportunities there. As others have remarked such a trend can already be observed.






1 As an aside, I can observe some traits of people most likely to emigrate from Europe — e.g. being religious, entrepreneurial, adventurous, optimistic and energetic — in America still today, while they sometimes seem to lack in Europe.





share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 12 at 15:00

























answered Dec 12 at 11:41









Peter A. Schneider

22715




22715












  • Sources might improve this answer. // Your footnote is regurgitating myths, and quite a few of them mixed. If you take these assertions to a structural perspective, it all disaapears. Small scale example: Go to a bad neighbourhood in N or S America, then compare that to quarters that are just starting gentrification anywhere in Europe. There are no essentialist differences in traits of people compared, but economic and cultural factors of quite some significance if you want to look at it at this macro-level.
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 14:54












  • @LangLangCn Yes, sources would most certainly improve the answer. Anybody? // I made the observation of traits personally with American acquiantances; it's quite obvious but only anecdotal, so I edited the footnote to make that clear.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:03












  • But that observation is anecdotal evidence and from a highly biased sample and formed via your own bias/expectations. Far from a reliable fact. –– On the other hand, add these caveats and it becomes reasonable observation (in fact one often heard), instantly. ;)
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 15:06






  • 1




    @LangLangC Another remark to sources: The facts (need for motivation to migrate, social norms, abundance of resources, Declaration of Independence) are obvious and undisputed; the conclusions are all mine and seem fairly obvious. The merit of my answer (if any) is to structure them and sum them up.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:12




















  • Sources might improve this answer. // Your footnote is regurgitating myths, and quite a few of them mixed. If you take these assertions to a structural perspective, it all disaapears. Small scale example: Go to a bad neighbourhood in N or S America, then compare that to quarters that are just starting gentrification anywhere in Europe. There are no essentialist differences in traits of people compared, but economic and cultural factors of quite some significance if you want to look at it at this macro-level.
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 14:54












  • @LangLangCn Yes, sources would most certainly improve the answer. Anybody? // I made the observation of traits personally with American acquiantances; it's quite obvious but only anecdotal, so I edited the footnote to make that clear.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:03












  • But that observation is anecdotal evidence and from a highly biased sample and formed via your own bias/expectations. Far from a reliable fact. –– On the other hand, add these caveats and it becomes reasonable observation (in fact one often heard), instantly. ;)
    – LangLangC
    Dec 12 at 15:06






  • 1




    @LangLangC Another remark to sources: The facts (need for motivation to migrate, social norms, abundance of resources, Declaration of Independence) are obvious and undisputed; the conclusions are all mine and seem fairly obvious. The merit of my answer (if any) is to structure them and sum them up.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Dec 12 at 15:12


















Sources might improve this answer. // Your footnote is regurgitating myths, and quite a few of them mixed. If you take these assertions to a structural perspective, it all disaapears. Small scale example: Go to a bad neighbourhood in N or S America, then compare that to quarters that are just starting gentrification anywhere in Europe. There are no essentialist differences in traits of people compared, but economic and cultural factors of quite some significance if you want to look at it at this macro-level.
– LangLangC
Dec 12 at 14:54






Sources might improve this answer. // Your footnote is regurgitating myths, and quite a few of them mixed. If you take these assertions to a structural perspective, it all disaapears. Small scale example: Go to a bad neighbourhood in N or S America, then compare that to quarters that are just starting gentrification anywhere in Europe. There are no essentialist differences in traits of people compared, but economic and cultural factors of quite some significance if you want to look at it at this macro-level.
– LangLangC
Dec 12 at 14:54














@LangLangCn Yes, sources would most certainly improve the answer. Anybody? // I made the observation of traits personally with American acquiantances; it's quite obvious but only anecdotal, so I edited the footnote to make that clear.
– Peter A. Schneider
Dec 12 at 15:03






@LangLangCn Yes, sources would most certainly improve the answer. Anybody? // I made the observation of traits personally with American acquiantances; it's quite obvious but only anecdotal, so I edited the footnote to make that clear.
– Peter A. Schneider
Dec 12 at 15:03














But that observation is anecdotal evidence and from a highly biased sample and formed via your own bias/expectations. Far from a reliable fact. –– On the other hand, add these caveats and it becomes reasonable observation (in fact one often heard), instantly. ;)
– LangLangC
Dec 12 at 15:06




But that observation is anecdotal evidence and from a highly biased sample and formed via your own bias/expectations. Far from a reliable fact. –– On the other hand, add these caveats and it becomes reasonable observation (in fact one often heard), instantly. ;)
– LangLangC
Dec 12 at 15:06




1




1




@LangLangC Another remark to sources: The facts (need for motivation to migrate, social norms, abundance of resources, Declaration of Independence) are obvious and undisputed; the conclusions are all mine and seem fairly obvious. The merit of my answer (if any) is to structure them and sum them up.
– Peter A. Schneider
Dec 12 at 15:12






@LangLangC Another remark to sources: The facts (need for motivation to migrate, social norms, abundance of resources, Declaration of Independence) are obvious and undisputed; the conclusions are all mine and seem fairly obvious. The merit of my answer (if any) is to structure them and sum them up.
– Peter A. Schneider
Dec 12 at 15:12







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