Using a substantial set of vagrancy removal records for Middlesex (1777–86) giving details of the place of origin of some 11,500 individuals, and analysing these records using a five-variable gravity model of migration, this article addresses a simple question: from which parts of England did London draw its lower-class migrants in the late eighteenth century? It concludes, first, that industrializing areas of the north emerged as a competitor for potential migrants—contributing relatively fewer migrants than predicted by the model. Rising wage rates in these areas appear to explain this phenomenon. Second, it argues that migration from urban centres in the west midlands and parts of the West Country, including Bristol, Birmingham, and Worc...
Migration, which is becoming the most important branch of demography is the central theme of this th...
It is important for any country to understand why its population makes certain choices on where to l...
The study of migration in the two hundred years before birth-place data was recorded in the 1841 Cen...
Using a substantial set of vagrancy removal records for Middlesex (1777–86) giving details of the pl...
This paper examines the determinants of migration from 19 southern counties to six major destination...
Key among Ravenstein’s “laws”, derived from extensive analysis of mid-19th century migration pattern...
Longitudinal residential histories are used to examine the extent to which three rural areas in Brit...
Migration in England and Wales during the nineteenth-century has been much studied in the past centu...
ABSTRACT This paper analyses the local incidence across England of migration flows from the eight Ac...
This paper presents an analysis of migration between 1851 and 1861 in four small areas of rural Engl...
[Excerpt] There is a long and well established tradition of studies analysing the pattern and causes...
Migration is becoming a significant population distribution factor for changes in population numbers...
The causes of internal migration in Great Britain constitute a topic still largely unexplored. This ...
[Excerpt] Historians have long acknowledged that London, because of its enormous size and rapidly gr...
This thesis is an investigation into patterns of migration in England in the latter half of the nine...
Migration, which is becoming the most important branch of demography is the central theme of this th...
It is important for any country to understand why its population makes certain choices on where to l...
The study of migration in the two hundred years before birth-place data was recorded in the 1841 Cen...
Using a substantial set of vagrancy removal records for Middlesex (1777–86) giving details of the pl...
This paper examines the determinants of migration from 19 southern counties to six major destination...
Key among Ravenstein’s “laws”, derived from extensive analysis of mid-19th century migration pattern...
Longitudinal residential histories are used to examine the extent to which three rural areas in Brit...
Migration in England and Wales during the nineteenth-century has been much studied in the past centu...
ABSTRACT This paper analyses the local incidence across England of migration flows from the eight Ac...
This paper presents an analysis of migration between 1851 and 1861 in four small areas of rural Engl...
[Excerpt] There is a long and well established tradition of studies analysing the pattern and causes...
Migration is becoming a significant population distribution factor for changes in population numbers...
The causes of internal migration in Great Britain constitute a topic still largely unexplored. This ...
[Excerpt] Historians have long acknowledged that London, because of its enormous size and rapidly gr...
This thesis is an investigation into patterns of migration in England in the latter half of the nine...
Migration, which is becoming the most important branch of demography is the central theme of this th...
It is important for any country to understand why its population makes certain choices on where to l...
The study of migration in the two hundred years before birth-place data was recorded in the 1841 Cen...