Urban Sustainability And The Subjective Well-Being Of Migrants: The Role Of Risks, Place Attachment, And Aspirations
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Population, Space and Place
Abstract
While material conditions of migrant populations on average tend to improve over
time as they become established in new destinations, individual trajectories of
material and subjective well-being often diverge. Here, we analyse how social and
environmental factors in the urban environment shape the subjective well-being of
migrant populations. We hypothesize that these factors include (a) perceived social and
environmental risk, (b) attachment to place, and (c) migrant aspirations. We analyse
data from a cross-sectional survey of 2641 individual migrants in seven cities across
Ghana, India, and Bangladesh. The results show that the persistence of inferior
material conditions, exposure to environmental hazards, and constrained access to
services and employment affect migrants' subjective well-being. Hence, social and
environmental risks constitute urban precarity for migrants whose social vulnerability
persist in their destination. Meeting migration-related aspirations and developing an
affinity to urban destinations have the potential to mitigate negative sentiments from
perceived risks. These findings have implications for future urban planning and
sustainability.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
environmental risks, subjective well-being, urban sustainability