| Literature DB >> 12316385 |
Abstract
This review culls disparate elements from the theoretical and research literature on human migration to argue for the construction of a theory of migration that simultaneously incorporates multiple levels of analysis within a longitudinal perspective. A detailed review of interconnections among individual behavior, household strategies, community structures, and national political economies indicates that inter-level and inter-temporal dependencies are inherent to the migration process and give it a strong internal momentum. The dynamic interplay between network growth and individual migration labor, migration remittances, and local income distributions all create powerful feedback mechanisms that lead to the cumulative causation of migration. These mechanisms are reinforced and shaped by macrolevel relationships within the larger political economy.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior; Communication; Cost Benefit Analysis; Data Analysis; Decision Making; Demographic Factors; Demography; Developed Countries; Developing Countries; Economic Factors; Evaluation; Evaluation Methodology; Family And Household; Feedback; Information Networks; Labor Migration--determinants; Literature Review; Longitudinal Studies; Macroeconomic Factors; Mathematical Model; Microeconomic Factors; Migration--determinants; Models, Theoretical; Population; Population Dynamics; Population Theory; Quantitative Evaluation; Remittances; Research Methodology; Social Sciences; Studies
Mesh:
Year: 1990 PMID: 12316385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Popul Index ISSN: 0032-4701