Internal and International Migration Across the Urban Hierarchy in Albania
The interactions between the processes of urbanization and international migration in less developed and transition countries have important repercussions for socioeconomic development, but are not well understood. Based on the retrospective data from the Albanian Living Standards Measurement Survey...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Population research and policy review 2016-12, Vol.35 (6), p.851-876 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The interactions between the processes of urbanization and international migration in less developed and transition countries have important repercussions for socioeconomic development, but are not well understood. Based on the retrospective data from the Albanian Living Standards Measurement Survey 2008, we first assess the geography of migration in terms of the rural–urban continuum, the urban hierarchy and the outside world since 1990. We then investigate the spatio-temporal diffusion of rural-to-urban and international movements using survival models. Results reveal an immediate onset of large-scale rural exodus, despite the post-communist crisis. Internal migrants mainly moved to the capital, bypassing secondary cities, and were predominantly female. Initially, international migrants were primarily men who tended to originate from the main urban agglomerations. The diffusion of opportunities to emigrate down the urban hierarchy and across the sexes then redirected the rural exodus abroad, despite domestic economic development. This evolution in population mobility is related to the gendered patterns and inter-linkages of the two flows, as well as to rising inequalities within the urban hierarchy. |
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ISSN: | 0167-5923 1573-7829 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11113-016-9404-2 |