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Showing 31 to 45 of 94 results Save | Export
Beale, Calvin L. – 1972
The purpose of this paper is to review recent trends in the rural and/or nonmetropolitan population and to indicate some of the linkages and implications for national population policy. The vast rural to urban migration of the last generation was necessary and rational, since most migrants believed they benefitted by moving. Although much of the…
Descriptors: Community Size, Demography, Employment Patterns, Farmers
Price, Daniel O. – 1969
This is the first volume of a three-volume study that examined the types of people who are better off by moving from a rural to an urban area and considered possible intervention in the rural-urban migration process. The population for the study was composed of Mexican-Americans who migrated from South Texas to San Antonio and Chicago, Negroes who…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Blacks, Economic Factors, Interviews
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Massey, Douglas S. – American Sociological Review, 1986
Examines the process of integration and settlement among Mexican migrants. The following social and economic developments increase the likelihood that migrants will settle in the United States: (1) bringing family members; (2) making new friends; 3) establishing institutional connections; and (4) obtaining stable, better-paying jobs.(Author/PS)
Descriptors: Braceros, Family Relationship, Immigrants, Interpersonal Relationship
MacGuffie, Robert A.; and others – Rehabil Counseling Bull, 1969
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Family Attitudes, Migration, Physical Disabilities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ballweg, John A.; Li, Li – Southern Rural Sociology, 1992
Among 2,028 graduates of 15 southern land-grant universities, starting salary was most important factor in accepting first employment outside the state. Among males, those more concerned about work characteristics (e.g., challenge, advancement, and use of education) were more likely to leave, whereas those concerned about job environmental…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Employment, Graduate Surveys, Higher Education
Rose, Peter I., Ed. – 1986
This book contains a transcript of discussions at a 1983 conference held at Smith College (Massachusetts) for refugee workers. Included are presentations by official representatives of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, foreign service officers, administrators of key voluntary agencies, immigration lawyers, social workers, case…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Agency Role, International Relations, Land Settlement
Morton, J. B.; And Others – 1975
The purpose of the mobility study was to determine what number and percentage of secondary, postsecondary, and full-time adult graduates of vocational-technical programs in Oklahoma find or seek employment in the same geographic region of their graduation. It was also determined what number and percentage of graduates leave the region to seek…
Descriptors: Geographic Distribution, Geographic Location, Graduate Surveys, Maps
Taves, Marvin J.; Coller, Richard W. – 1964
To examine the migration and vocational choices of recent high school graduates from three geographical areas of Minnesota, data were obtained by questionnaires and interviews of 739 male high school graduates from the years 1948-1956. The sample was stratified by agricultural income of the region. Some findings were: (1) Out-migration was greater…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Economic Factors, Graduate Surveys, High School Graduates
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Shelton, Beth Anne – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1987
Found a strong correlation between residential mobility rate and a measure of marital dissolution. Concluded that community size and marital dissolution correlated positively because of higher levels of residential mobility in large cities and urban areas than in small cities and rural areas. Found high residential mobility both an indicator and a…
Descriptors: Community Size, Divorce, Family Problems, Marital Instability
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Spitze, Glenna – Social Science Quarterly, 1984
The effects of family migration (1) are negative for employment status, weeks worked, and earnings, null for weeks unemployed, and marginal for attitudes; (2) are similar for married women in their 20s, 30s, and 40s; and (3) do not last beyond the first or second year after a move. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attitudes, Employed Women, Employment
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Swanson, Louis E., Jr.; And Others – Rural Sociology, 1979
Examining relationships between social restraints and economic incentives on individuals' willingness to move, special attention was given to labor force participation relative to social factors. Regression Analysis found age and community tenure correlated negatively with willingness to move; people who were employed or not yet retired showed…
Descriptors: Age, Labor Force, Labor Force Nonparticipants, Migration
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Verropoulou, Georgia; Joshi, Heather; Wiggins, Richard – Children & Society, 2002
Examined the relationship between moving home, family structure, and children's well-being in the National Child Development Study (NCDS) Second-Generation, a study following over 17,000 Britons born in 1 week in 1958. Found little to no association between moving home and children's well-being. Associations between family living arrangements and…
Descriptors: Children, Cohort Analysis, Family Mobility, Family Structure
Curby, Vicki Morgan – 1980
Relationships between selected characteristics of women administrators and their geographical mobility were studied. In addition to identifying variables associated with the geographic mobility of women administrators, factors women administrators identify in considering relocation are described. Questionnaire responses were analyzed for 1,389…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Administrators, College Administration
Hippler, Arthur E. – 1970
The report discusses socialization as related to the movement of Alaska natives from small villages to larger villages and finally to Alaska's urban centers. The study, which was limited to the village milieu of Northwest Alaska Eskimo communities, points out that a type of quasi-urban acculturation is brought about by the natives' increased…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indians, Attitudes, Community
Nicholson, Beryl – 1976
Migration over a period of 20 years in 3 neighbouring, but contrasting, communes in North Norway was examined to determine whether a village or small town in a rural area functioned as an intervening opportunity for the area's rural inhabitants. The nature and effects of local migration which occurred in a predominantly rural area during the…
Descriptors: Age, Community Size, Demography, Foreign Countries
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