Chapter 4 Newton’s First Law of Migration: The Gravity Model.

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Chapter 4 Newton’s First Law of Migration: The Gravity Model

Transcript of Chapter 4 Newton’s First Law of Migration: The Gravity Model.

Page 1: Chapter 4 Newton’s First Law of Migration: The Gravity Model.

Chapter 4

Newton’s First Law of Migration:The Gravity Model

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Places are connected through spatial interaction

ideas

information

money

products

people(p. 88)

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Figure 4.1 (p. 89)

Migration

A permanent change in residence to outside one’s

community of origin.

Occurs at various spatial scales:

rural-to-urban

urban-to-urban

global (between countries)

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Factors of Place Desirability

(p. 88)

Less-desirable places

More-desirable places

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remittances

immigration = migration across an international border

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refugees immigrate unwillingly due to persecution in their home country

(a PUSH factor)

PUSH factorsPULL factors

other

better job

pleasant physical setting

affordable housing

desirable climate

proximity to family

high housing costs

traffic gridlock

rising crime rates

high tax rates

poor climate

undesirable job

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Migrant Selectivity

Figure 4.2 (p. 90)

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Distance Decay

Figure 4.3 (p. 91)

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Migration Streams

Figure 4.4 (p. 92)

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Migration Streams&

Counterstreams

Figure 4.5 (p. 93)

Ten Largest Domestic Migration Streams of

Persons Born in Cuba

Ten Largest Domestic Migration Streams of

Persons Born in Mexico

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Gravity Model

(p. 95)

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Figure 4.6 (p. 95)

Migration to California

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Mobility

• Part of American experience

• Mobility is high in developed countries with immigrant background

• Migration in the past as a predictor of future migration.

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U.S. Mobility Rates

Figure 4.8 (p. 98)

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Largest interstate migration streams

Figures 4.9 (p. 99)

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Net migration rates by stateFigures 4.10 (p. 99)

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• Regional and sub-regional shifts in population

• Net migration

• Migration patterns reflect:- location of states- historical patterns of movement- changing economic geography- perceptions about places

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Name That Key Term

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A person who is outside his or her country due to a well-founded fear of persecution and who is unable or unwilling to return.

Refugee

A permanent change in residence to outside one’s community of origin. Migration

A move across international borders.

Movements of ideas, information, money, products, and people between places. Spatial Interaction

Immigration

A well-defined migration channel from a specific origin to a particular destination. Migration Stream

Migration that runs opposite to a migration stream. Migration Counterstream

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Reasons to move from a particular place. Push Factors

Reasons to move to a particular place. Pull Factors

The percentage gain or loss of population due to migration. It is calculated as in-

migrants minus out-migrants divided by the total population, all times 100.

Positive numbers indicate net gain; negative numbers indicate net loss.

Net Migration Rate

The tendency for certain types of people to migrate. Age, education, and other sociodemographic characteristics are

________ ________ factors.

Migration Selectivity

Money sent by immigrants from host country to home country. Remittances

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A model to predict spatial interaction, where size (population) is directly

related to interaction and distance is inversely related to interaction.

Gravity Model

The declining intensity of an activity with increasing distance from its point of origin.

Distance Decay