References

LINE

  1. Borhani Haghighi, A. and Davies, R. B. (1999a), Characterising temporal effects in social science data, Computational Statistics and Data Analysis, forthcoming
  2. Borhani Haghighi, A. and Davies, R. B. (1999b), How migration propensity varies with age; the effects of life cycle and individual level characteristics, Environment and Planning A, forthcoming
  3. Boyle, P., Halfacree, K. and Robinson V. (1998), Exploring Contemporary Migration, Longman
  4. Coleman, J. S. (1973), The Mathematics of Collective Action, Heinemann
  5. Cote, G. L. (1997), Socio-economic attainment, regional disparities and internal migration, European Sociological Review 13, No.1, p. 55-77.
  6. Davies, R. B. and Flowerdew R. (1992), Modeling migration careers, using data from a British survey, Geographical Analysis, 24, No.1, p. 35-57
  7. Devis, T. (1983), People changing address:1971 and 1981, Population Trends, 32, p.15-20.
  8. Dex, S. (1995), The reliability of recall data: A literature review, Bulletin de Methodologie Sociologique, 49, p. 58-80.
  9. Dex, S. and McCullough, A. (1998), The reliability of retrospective unemployment history data, Work, Employment and Society, 12, no.3, p. 497-509.
  10. Ellis, M., Barff, R., and Renard, B.(1993), Migration regions and interstate labor flows by occupation in the United States, Growth and Change, 24, No. 2, p. 166-190.
  11. Greenwood, M. J.(1985), Human migration: Theory, models and empirical studies, Journal of Regional Science, 25, No. 4, p. 521-544.
  12. Goss, E. P. (1985), General skills, specific skills and the migration decision, Regional Science Perspective, 15, p. 17-26.
  13. Grundy, E. M. C.(1989), OPCS Longitudinal Study - Women's migration: Marriage, fertility and divorce, HMSO
  14. Heckman, J. J. and Singer, B. (1984), A method of minimising the impact of distributional assumptions in econometric models of duration, Econometrica, 52, p. 271-320.
  15. Heckman, J. J. and Singer, B. (1985), Social Science duration analysis, Longitudinal Analysis of Labor Market Data, Cambridge University Press, p. 39-58.
  16. Hertzog Jr., H. W., Schlottmann, A.M., and Boehm, T. P. (1993), Migration as a spatial job-search: A survey of empirical findings, Regional Studies, 27, No. 4, p. 327-340.
  17. Huff, J. O. and Clark, W. A. V. (1978), Cumulative stress and cumulative inertia: A behavioral model of decision to move, Environment and Planning A, 10, p. 1101-1119.
  18. Lancaster, T. (1979), Econometric methods for the duration of unemployment, Econometrica, 47, No. 4.
  19. Lancaster, T. and Nickell, S. (1980), The analysis of re-employment probabilities for the unemployed, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society A , 143, Part 2, p. 141-165.
  20. Liaw, K. L. (1990), Joint effects of personal factors and ecological variables on the interprovintial migration pattern of young adults in Canada: A nested logit analysis, Geographical Analysis, 22, No. 3, p. 189-208.
  21. Long, L. L. (1972), The influence of the number of children on residential mobility, Demography , 9, No. 3.
  22. Mc Ginnis, R. (1968), A stochastic model of social mobility, American Sociological Review, p. 712-722
  23. Salt, J. (1990), Organisational labour migration: Theory and practice in the United Kingdom, in Labour Migration, ed. J. H. Johnson and J. Salt, p. 52-69 (David Fulton)
  24. Sandefur, G. D. and Scott, W. J. (1981), A dynamic analysis of migration: an assessment of the effects of age, family and career variables, Demography, 18, No. 3, p. 355-368.
  25. Warnes, A. M. (1983), Migration in late working age and early retirement, Socio-Economic Planning Sciences, 17, p.291- 302.

Home page

Contents

Previous