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  • Title: [Mossi socio-economic systems and migrations].
    Author: Boutillier JL, Quesnel A, Vaugelade J.
    Journal: Cah Orstom (Sci Hum); 1977; 14(4):361-81. PubMed ID: 12261694.
    Abstract:
    The dynamics of migration among the Mossi of Upper Volta are analyzed through an examination of the socioeconomic objectives of population movements in the precolonial period and at present. The article discusses the precolonial and contemporary Mossi socioeconomic systems, the organization of production, the demographic characteristics of current migration and the sources of data regarding it, the influence of receiving areas on the expansion of migration, the effects on Mossi economy and society of migrant savings, the effect of prolonged absence of migrants on Mossi organization of production, and regional determinants of migration. Precolonial Mossi society differed from the common view of traditional African societies in several respects: the most common unit of production was a polygamous conjugal family, the political system was complex and hierarchical, and a form of money was used. Contemporary Mossi society continues to be governed largely according to norms inherited from the ancestors. 2 types of factors, socioeconomic status and possibilities of accession to land, appear to condition emigration and such of its features as age, duration, and whether or not the spouse accompanies the migrant. Demographic data on migration in Upper Volta was acquired in a 1973 follow-up study of residents interviewed in a 1960-61 sample survey which covered about 49% of the national population. The development of a capitalist agrarian system in the coastal countries of Ghana and the Ivory Coast has been associated with an increased flow of migration from Upper Volta and a modification of the nature of migratory movement. Because so many young men are absent abroad, more and more of the agricultural work is undertaken by the very old or the very young, and the power of the elders is consequently declining. Development efforts in Upper Volta are influenced, often unfavorably, by the type of development process occurring in the neighboring countries.
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