Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-g7rbq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-01T09:21:38.389Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Population Geography and Settlement Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2015

R. I. Lawless*
Affiliation:
Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, University of Durham

Extract

Oil wealth has transformed Libya, a desertic and sparsely populated country, bringing dramatic demographic changes (Zoghlami 1979). El Mehdawi and Clarke (1982) and Lawless and Kezeiri (1983) describe and analyse the growing polarisation of the population in the north-west and north-east coastal regions which contain the two largest cities, Tripoli and Benghazi. They show that in recent years spatial duality has been sharply intensified by strong rural to urban migration and also by an increase in interregional migration. The concentration of new development programmes in certain urban centres has been the main cause of the development differential among the regions. As a result the regions which include the most important urban centres have become the most prosperous and the others have become less developed or even depressed. This has been the main cause of the rapid increase in both rural to urban migration and interregional migration. The inhabitants of the less developed regions have continued to move in increasing numbers to those which are more developed. The large majority of migrants who moved from these less developed regions are represented by rural people who have changed their place of residence and their occupation. They have left their work in the rural sector to seek employment in the industrial and service sector. As a result agricultural production has declined. The agrarian sector now employs less than a quarter of the Libyan workforce and the percentage of nomads and semi-nomads has declined to under 10% of the population. Albergani and Vignet-Zunz (1982) have shown that colonial invasion and occupation followed by the Second World War threatened the Bedouin of the Jebel Akhdar with extinction, not through sedentarisation but through the mass migration of a devastated rural population. The advent of oil and the high salary levels available in urban centres further encouraged this tendency. Gannous (1979) studied the movement of Bedouin from rural areas to the town of Al Abiyar and the erosion of Bedouin culture by urban values.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Libyan Studies 1989

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

Abu-Lughod, J. 1976. Developments in north African urbanism: the process of decolonization. In Berry, B. J. L. (ed.), Urbanization and Counter-Urbanization. Beverly Hills, Sage Publications: 191212.Google Scholar
Alawar, Mohamed. 1982. Urbanization in Libya — present state and future prospects. In Joffé, E. G. H., McLachlan, K. S. (eds.), Social and Economic Development of Libya. Wisbech, England: Menas Press; Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press: 331353.Google Scholar
Albergoni, G. and Vignet-Zunz, J. 1982. Aspects of modernization among the Bedouin of Barqah. In Joffé, E. G. H., McLachlan, K. S. (eds.), Social and Economic Development of Libya. Wisbech, England: Menas Press; Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press: 189193.Google Scholar
Attir, M. O. 1983. Libya's pattern of urbanisation. Ekistics 50 (300): 157162.Google Scholar
Bean, L. L. 1983. The labour force and urbanisation in the Middle East: analysis and policy. Ekistics 50 (300): 195204.Google Scholar
Beauge, G. and Burgat, F. 1986. La question des migrations en Libye. Maghreb-Machrek 112: 5668.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birks, J. S. and Sinclair, C. A. 1979. The Libyan Arab Jamahiriya: labour migration sustains dualistic development. The Maghreb Review 4, 3: 95102.Google ScholarPubMed
Birks, S. and Sinclair, C. 1984. Libya: problems of a rentier state. In Lawless, R. I. and Findlay, A. M. (eds.), North Africa: Contemporary Politics and Economic Development. London and Canberra, Croom Helm; New York, St. Martin's Press: 241275.Google Scholar
Blake, G. H. 1979. Urbanization and development planning in Libya. In Obudho, R. A., El-Shakhs, S. (eds.), Development of Urban Systems in Africa. New York, Praeger: 99115.Google Scholar
Blake, G. H. 1983. Tradition and change in a Libyan market town: Misratah 1966–74. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 74 (3): 175184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buru, M. M. 1985. The Tripoli agglomeration: land use changes and land use options. In Buru, M. M., Ghanem, S. M., McLachlan, K. S. (eds.), Planning and Development in Modern Libya. London: Society for Libyan Studies and Menas Press: 110119.Google Scholar
Clarke, J. I. 1971. The growth of capital cities in Africa. Afrika Spectrum 2: 3340.Google Scholar
Daza, Mahmoud Hassan 1982. Understanding the Traditional Built Environment Crisis, Change and the Issue of Human Needs in the Context of Habitations and Settlements in Libya. Ph.D. thesis, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 389p (University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Michigan, order no. DA83-07302).Google Scholar
El Mehdawi, M. and Clarke, J. I. 1982. Population redistribution in Libya. In Clarke, J. I. and Kosinski, L. A. (eds.), Redistribution of Population in Africa. London, Heinemann: 6873.Google Scholar
El-Shakhs, S. 1975. Urbanization and spatial development in Libya. Pan African Journal, 7,4: 371386.Google Scholar
Essayed, Najia 1981. A household survey in Tripoli, Libya. Ekistics 48: 152156.Google Scholar
Findlay, A. 1981. Spatial Dimensions of Tunisian Emigration to Libya. International Migration Project, University of Durham, International Migration Project Working Paper, 19p.Google Scholar
Gannous, S. M. 1979. Changing social relationships in a Libyan semi-urban situation. International Social Science Journal 31, 2: 250262.Google Scholar
Ibrahim, Abdussalam and Lawless, R. I. 1988. Immigrant workers in the Libyan labour force. Immigrants and Minorities 7, 2: 206223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
INTALCONSULT. 1976. Libyan Settlement Study. Rome, 8 vols.Google Scholar
Kezeiri, Saad Khalil 1982. Restructuring the urban system in Libya. In Joffé, E. G. H., McLachlan, K. S. (eds.), Social and Economic Development of Libya. Wisbech, England: Menas Press; Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press: 355359.Google Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. 1983. Urban planning in Libya. Libyan Studies 14: 915.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. 1984a. The problem of defining a small urban centre in Libya. Libyan Studies 15: 142148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. 1984b. Aspects of Change and Development in the Small Towns in Libya. Ph.D. thesis, University of Durham, England (unpublished).Google Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. 1985. Here today, gone tomorrow: the problems of deteriorating historic centres. Libyan Studies 16: 8594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. 1986. L'explosion urbaine en Libye: la contribution des petites villes. Petites Villes et Villes Moyennes dans le Monde Arabe (Fascicule de Recherches No 17) Tours, URBAMA: 652674.Google Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. 1986. Population growth of the Libyan small towns. Libyan Studies 17: 155162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. and Lawless, R. I. 1986a. Libyan urbanization: the role of the small towns. Petites Villes et Villes Moyennes dans le Monde Arabe (Fascicule de Recherche No 17) Tours, URBAMA: 625697.Google Scholar
Kezeiri, S. K. and Lawless, R. I. 1986b. Economie development and spatial planning in Libya. Orient 1: 6988.Google Scholar
Lawless, R. I. and Kezeiri, S. K. 1983. Spatial aspects of population change in Libya. Méditerranée 4: 8186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawless, R. I. and Seccombe, I. J. 1984. North African labour migration: the search for alternatives. Immigrants and Minorities 3(2): 151166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawless, R. I. and Seccombe, I. J. 1986. The Middle East: a new destination for Turkish labour migration. Tidjschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 77,4: 251257.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
M'tar, A. 1978. The Tunisian labour force in the Libyan Arab Republic (in Arabic). Revue Tunisienne de Géographie 1: 136160.Google Scholar
Mahmood-Misrati, A. A. M. 1983. Land conversion to urban use: its impact and character in Libya. Ekistics 50(300): 183194.Google Scholar
Misallati, A. S. O. 1981. Tripoli, Libya: Structure and Functions as an Arab-Islamic City. Ph.D. thesis, University of Kentucky, Lexington. (University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Michigan, order no. DA84-01364).Google Scholar
Naur, M. 1981. The military and the Libyan labour force. Current Research on Peace and Violence. Tampere, Finland 4,1:8999.Google Scholar
Seccombe, I. J. and Lawless, R. I. 1985. Some new trends in Mediterranean labour migration: the Middle East connection. International Migration 23(1): 123147.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zarrugh, S. M. 1976. The Preservation of the People's Cultural and Urban Heritage in Libya: an Evaluation of the Current Situation and Recommended Framework for Action, with Emphasis on the Old City of Tripoli. Unpublished Master of Urban Planning thesis, School of Urban Planning and Landscape Architecture, Michigan State University.Google Scholar
Zoghlami, Y. 1979. La population de la Libye. Eléments pour un profil démographique. Revue Tunisienne de Géographie 2: 159170.Google Scholar