The best example that aligns with the analysis of the Great Atlantic Migration, where industrial developments and failures at home contributed to migration to the United States in the 1800s, would be migration from developing countries to the industrialized West since the 1960s. This type of migration often stems from economic challenges, lack of opportunities, and the pursuit of better living conditions in more industrialized nations, much like the circumstances faced by European migrants in the 19th century.
While the other options may involve displacement due to conflict or natural disasters, they do not directly relate to the industrial developments and economic failures that characterized the Great Atlantic Migration.