Labour migration : the internal geographical mobility of labour in the developed world

Bibliographic Information

Labour migration : the internal geographical mobility of labour in the developed world

edited by James H. Johnson and John Salt

Fulton, 1990

Available at  / 27 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A collection of studies of inter-urban migration, which is largely dominated by labour migration. The structure of the book reflects the interaction of the supply and demand of labour, the information flows that make this possible and the policy context within which labour migration occurs.

Table of Contents

  • The economics of information in context of migration, Dr.Gunter Maier
  • regional migration and its inter-relationship with journey-to-work experience, Dr.P.K.Doorn
  • regional policy and migration in Scandinavia, Professor Sture Oberg
  • job transfer and migration in the USA, Professor Ralph Sell
  • management development and migration in the internal labour markets of large companies in Britain, employee movement in large Japanese organisations, Dr.Richard Wiltshire
  • job advertising and occupational differentials in migration - local government in England and Wales, Dr.Mark Saunders
  • migration and dual career households, Dr.Janina Snaith
  • the housing experience of professional works, Dr.Alan Murie and Dr.Ray Forrest
  • migration behaviour among the unemployed and low-skilled, R.T.Kitching
  • the secondary migration of international migrants in Europe, Professor J.O'Loughlin
  • individual and organisational dimensions in the migration of school teachers, Brian Schofield
  • labour migration and counter urbanisation in France, Dr.Paul White
  • government policy and migration - an evaluation, labour migration within developed countries - dimensions and theory.

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