Dissertação
Mobilidade e vulnerabilidade socioambiental: um estudo de caso para Governador Valadares
Fecha
2019-03-11Autor
Marina Cavaliéri Gomes
Institución
Resumen
The decision to migrate is not always the only result of a purely weighted and individual
choice, in which the costs and benefits of the movement are weighed. Migration often also
reflects the socio-economic, political, and environmental contexts in which it is embedded.
Exposure to environmental risks and the availability and reliability of ecosystem services
affect migration directly and indirectly, since these services affect other drivers of migrations,
such as the economic context. Thus, it is important to consider the context and characteristics
of households in the study of migration and, more broadly, mobility. From this perspective,
mobility or immobility responses to environmental issues are likely to be associated with
socio-environmental characteristics and vulnerability of families and the context, and these
responses may be a mechanism of adaptation (to environmental events) and reduction or
aggravation of vulnerability. In addition, the speed and severity of environmental events may
impose the adoption of mobility on individuals, as in the case of a rapid onset event. This
dissertation consists of a case study about the association between socioenvironmental
vulnerability and the strategies of (im)mobility adopted by individuals residing in the urban
households of Governador Valadares. A conceptual framework was proposed as a synthesis of
the literature discussion, in which vulnerability and mobility interact through two mechanisms
(selectivity and adaptation), that could yield a gap of socio-environmental vulnerability of
households according to their potential to migrate and migratory history. The main objective
of this dissertation is to investigate if the mobility experiences lived up by the households in
Governador Valadares are related to different levels and dimensions of socio-environmental
vulnerability. For this purpose, a socio-environmental vulnerability index and mobility
typologies were constructed using data from a probabilistic, mutli-stage sample of 1226 urban
households collected between 2013 and 2016. The data are part of the project research
Migração, Vulnerabilidade e Mudanças Ambientais no Vale do Rio Doce. The vulnerability
index was developed using the Alkire-Foster (AF) method, which synthesizes information
from the selected indicators into a single variable that represents the level and intensity of the
vulnerability experienced by the household. Since part of the original indicators had different
measurement scales and the theoretical dimensions of vulnerability required a probabilistic
interpretation, a standardization of these variables was applied and the probability of its
occurrence was calculated from the half-defined integral under the normal curve up to its
standardized value. The application of the AF method also allowed the decomposition of
socio-environmental vulnerability by subgroups of home mobility and vulnerability
dimensions. This way, it was possible to qualify the households of each subgroup of mobility
as vulnerable and to measure the intensity of this vulnerability from three major dimensions:
exposure to risk, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity and resilience. The results suggest that
although vulnerable households in the international mobility subgroup are more exposed to
socio-environmental risks than those in the subgroup that have never experienced
international migration, they are more resilient, better able to adapt to the occurrence of socioenvironmental problems and there are indications that they are less vulnerable than the other
subgroup. Our findings also suggest that there is selectivity in international emigration, with
the least vulnerable households sending emigrants abroad as a likely strategy to adapt to
exposure to social and environmental risks. We also found the conditions at the household
surroundings among the vulnerable would be the main aggravating factors of socioenvironmental vulnerability, and therefore should be priorities in any mitigating strategy aimed to curb vulnerability at the household level.