During the past several decades, rural America has experienced turbulent demographic change. We examine rural age-specific migration data for 1950 to 1995 to ascertain whether the numerous economic, social, and technological factors buffeting nonmetropolitan America have altered migration patterns across age groups and types of counties. Both continuity and change are evident in the analysis. We find differentiation in the migration profiles of certain specialized types of rural counties, as well as temporal variability from decade to decade. No clear longitudinal trend in migration patterns is present, however. In fact, an underlying continuity in age-specific trends has endured through good times and bad
This paper summarizes annual migration patterns across the rural–urban continuum in the USA between ...
Previous studies of human migration have tended to use information drawn either from cross-sectional...
Previous studies of human migration have tended to use information drawn either from cross-sectional...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
Members of the baby boom cohort, now 45-63 years old, are approaching a period in their lives when m...
Members of the baby boom cohort, now 45-63 years old, are approaching a period in their lives when m...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
As fertility differences in the United States diminish, population redistribution trends are increas...
The United States (US) population is aging rapidly. Increases in life expectancy, persistent and low...
As fertility differences in the United States diminish, population redistribution trends are increas...
Migration—people moving between locations—is now driving much of the demographic change occurring in...
This chapter examines non-metropolitan demographic trends in the first decade of the 21st century, w...
This paper studies rural demographic trends at the global level with an analysis of a specially prep...
For many decades, the predominant population migration pattern in the United States indicated people...
This paper summarizes annual migration patterns across the rural–urban continuum in the USA between ...
Previous studies of human migration have tended to use information drawn either from cross-sectional...
Previous studies of human migration have tended to use information drawn either from cross-sectional...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
Members of the baby boom cohort, now 45-63 years old, are approaching a period in their lives when m...
Members of the baby boom cohort, now 45-63 years old, are approaching a period in their lives when m...
Background: Migration is the primary population redistribution process in the United States. Selecti...
As fertility differences in the United States diminish, population redistribution trends are increas...
The United States (US) population is aging rapidly. Increases in life expectancy, persistent and low...
As fertility differences in the United States diminish, population redistribution trends are increas...
Migration—people moving between locations—is now driving much of the demographic change occurring in...
This chapter examines non-metropolitan demographic trends in the first decade of the 21st century, w...
This paper studies rural demographic trends at the global level with an analysis of a specially prep...
For many decades, the predominant population migration pattern in the United States indicated people...
This paper summarizes annual migration patterns across the rural–urban continuum in the USA between ...
Previous studies of human migration have tended to use information drawn either from cross-sectional...
Previous studies of human migration have tended to use information drawn either from cross-sectional...