Migration and the metropolis : an empirical and theoretical analysis of inter-regional migration to and from South East England
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Bibliographic Information
Migration and the metropolis : an empirical and theoretical analysis of inter-regional migration to and from South East England
(Progress in planning, v. 39,
Pergamon, c1993
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Note
Bibliography: p. 166
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This study is in two parts: the first and larger part is entirely empirical and consists of detailed analyses of migration flows to and from South East England over the 1970s and 1980s. It draws upon two Office of Population Censuses and Surveys' data sources: the National Health Service Central Register; and the Longitudinal Study. The first is used to monitor the year-on-year changes in migration flows between South East England and the counties of England and Wales, and includes some analyses of age-specific migration streams. The second is used to examine the social composition of the migration flows to and from the South East, and includes analyses of the effects of these migrations on the social class structure of the region. The second part of the study is more theoretical and speculative. It interprets these migration flows in terms of the effects of the housing-market-related business cycle: the effects of labour market restructuring; and the role that the South East plays as an 'escalator region' within the British "space-economy".
Table of Contents
Part 1 Empirical Analysis of Inter-Regional Migration Flows to and from South East England: The National Health Service central register data. The OPCS longitudinal study data. Part 2 Inter-Regional Migration to and from South East England in the Context of British Regional Development and Planning: Introduction. Economic conjuncture: short-term, surface-level processes-housing market boom and bust and the business cycle. Economic restructuring: medium-term, middle-level processes - spatial divisions of labour. Globalization: long-term, deep structural processes - South East England as an "escalator region".
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