The example that aligns most closely with the factors of industrial developments and failures at home, similar to the Great Atlantic Migration, is migration from developing countries to the industrialized West since the 1960s.
This migration often occurs as individuals seek better economic opportunities, jobs, and living conditions in more industrialized nations, driven by the lack of industrial development and economic opportunities in their home countries. This is reminiscent of the European migration to the U.S. in the 1800s, where people left due to economic challenges, industrial changes, and social factors in their native countries.
While the other options involve significant events of displacement or conflict, they do not specifically highlight the motivations tied to industrial developments and economic failures in the same way.