Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T23:20:15.807Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Rural to Urban Migration: Some Data from Botswana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

One of the most consequential recent developments in Africa is its rapid rate of urbanization. Over much of the continent, there is a movement from rural areas to urban centers and towns (Hanna and Hanna, 1971). There has been some social science research on this process (Caldwell, 1969; Mabogunje, 1968; Ross, 1975). Additional case studies reflecting original empirical research are essential to social scientists attempting to interpret the nature of the concomitant social and political change. Data generated by such empirical research are also needed by policy makers struggling to fashion policy strategies responsive to the changing urban needs.

On this most rapidly urbanizing continent, one of the countries with the highest rates of rural to urban migration is Botswana. Between 1971 and 1975, its capital, Gaborone, experienced an annual population growth rate of almost 15 percent. In December 1975, the Department of Statistics of the University College of Botswana conducted a major survey of migrants in Gaborone. In this article, we will report and discuss significant survey findings concerning the demographic and social characteristics of migrants, their motives for migrating, places of origin, the disposition of new arrivals in town, and the continuing pattern of rural urban linkages.

In 1966, at the time of independence, Botswana, about the size of France or Kenya, had only three “modern” towns with a combined population of around twenty thousand people. Gaborone, a small tribal village and colonial administrative center, was selected in 1964 as the site for the new capital which previously had been Mafeking, South Africa. Nearly all of the present population are migrants to the new town.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1978

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Anderson, Dennis and Leiserson, Mark. (1977) “Non-Farm Rural Employment in Developing Countries.” Paper presented at the Joint Meeting of the Latin American Studies Association and the African Studies Association. Houston, Texas. (November)Google Scholar
Baker, Pauline. (1976) Urbanization and Political Change. California: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Botswana Central Statistics Office. (1972) Report on the Population Census, 1971. Gaborone: The Government Printer.Google Scholar
Botswana Central Statistics Office. (1974) A Social and Economic Survey in Three Peri-Urban Areas in Botswana. Gaborone: The Government Printer.Google Scholar
Botswana Central Statistics Office. (1975) Statistical Abstract. Gaborone: The Government Printer.Google Scholar
Botswana Central Statistics Office. (1976) Rural Income Distribution Survey in Botswana, 1974/75. Gaborone: The Government Printer.Google Scholar
Bryant, Coralie. (1976) Participation, Planning, and Administrative Development in Urban Development Programs. Washington: Office of Urban Development, Agency for International Development, U.S. Department of State.Google Scholar
Bryant, Coralie. (1977a) “Rural to Urban Migration in Botswana and its Policy Implications.” Washington: U.S. AID Contract No. AID/afr-c-1229. [January]Google Scholar
Bryant, Coralie., with Ismail, Shaik. (1977b) “Urban Administration in Transition.” Paper presented at the American Society for Public Administration Meetings, Atlanta. (March)Google Scholar
Bryant, Coralie. (1977c) “Women Migrants, Urbanization, and Social Change: The Botswana Case.” Paper presented at the American Political Science Association Meetings, Washington, D.C (September)Google Scholar
Caldwell, John. (1969) African Rural-Urban Migration. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Collin, David. (1976) Squatters and Oligarchs. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press.Google Scholar
El-Shakhs, Salah and Obudho, Robert, (eds.). (1975) Urbanization, National Development, and Regional Planning in Africa. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Findley, Sally. (1977) Planning for Internal Migration. Department of Commerce. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Friedman, John. (1973) Urbanization, Planning and National Development. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Hanna, John and Hanna, Judy. (1971) Urban Development and Black Africa. Chicago: Aldine-Atherton Press.Google Scholar
Hart, Keith. (1973) “Informal Income Opportunities and Urban Employment in Ghana.” Journal of Modern African Studies 11 (January): 6189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heisler, Helmuth. (1974) Urbanisation and the Government of Migration. London: Hurst Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Kerven, Carol. (1976) Migration to Francistown and Effects on the Urban and Rural Community: Some Preliminary Observations. Gaborone: paper given to the Workshop on Rural Environment and Development Planning, United Nations African Institute for Economic Development and Planning.Google Scholar
King, Robert and Byerlee, Derek. (1977) Income Distribution, Consumption Patterns and Consumption Linkages in Rural Sierra Leone. African Rural Economy Paper No. 16, Department of Agricultural Economics, Michigan State University, Michigan.Google Scholar
Laquian, Aprodicio. (1973) Town Drift: Social and Policy Implications of Rural-Urban Migration in Eight Developing Countries. Montreal: INTERMET, International Development Research Center.Google Scholar
Little, Kenneth. (1965) West Africa Urbanization: A Study of Voluntary Associations in Social Change. Cambridge, Massachusetts: M.I.T. Press.Google Scholar
Little, Kenneth. (1975) “Women in African Towns South of the Sahara: The Urbanization Dilemma,” pp. 7887 in Tinker, and Bramson, (eds.) Women and World Development. Washington: Overseas Development Council.Google Scholar
Mabogunje, Akin L. (1968) Urbanization in Nigeria. London: Frank Cass Publishing Co.Google Scholar
MacLiver, Sherry. (1977) Gaborone Migration Survey Follow-up: June 1976. Gaborone: Working Paper No. 9, National Institute for Research and Development in African Studies.Google Scholar
Mazumdar, Dipak. (1975) The Urban Informal Sector. Washington: Staff Working Paper No. 211, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.Google Scholar
Nelson, Joan. (1969) Migrants, Urban Poverty, and Instability in Developing Nations. Occasional Paper No. 22. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Nelson, Joan M. (1976) “Sojourners versus New Urbanites: Causes and Consequences of Temporary Versus Permanent Cityward Migration in Developing Countries.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 24, 4 (July): 721–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osborne, Alan. (1976) “Rural Development in Botswana: A Qualitative View.” Journal of Southern Africa Studies 2, 2 (April): 198213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perlman, Janice. (1976) The Myth of Marginality. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ross, Marc Howard. (1975) Grass Roots in an African City. Massachusetts: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Schapera, I. (1939) Married Life in an African Tribe. London: Faku and Faky Ltd.Google Scholar
Silitshena, Robson. (1972) “Population Movements and Settlement Changes in the Kweneng District.” Gaborone: University of Botswana, Lesotho, and Swaziland (unpublished manuscript).Google Scholar
Stephens, Betsy. (1976) Gaborone Migration Survey: December 1975. Gaborone: Working Paper No. 6, National Institute for Research in Development and African Studies.Google Scholar
Stephens, Betsy. (1977a) “Urban Migration in Botswana: Gaborone, 1975.” Botswana Notes and Records 9.Google Scholar
Stephens, Betsy. (1977b) Family Planning Follow-up Study. Gaborone: Discussion Paper No. 5, National Institute for Research and Development in African Studies.Google Scholar
Syson, Lucy. (1971) Some Aspects of “Traditional” and “Modern” Village Life in Botswana: Report of an Enquiry in the Shoshong Area. Gaborone: Technical Note No. 22, UNDP-FAO.Google Scholar
Todaro, Michael P. (1976) Internal Migration in Developing Countries. International Labour Office: Geneva.Google Scholar
Yap, Lorene. (1975) Internal Migration in Less Developed Countries: A Survey of the Literature. Washington: Staff Working Paper No. 215, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.Google Scholar