scholarly journals A Mobility Model for Return and Repeated Migration Based on Network Motifs

Author(s):  
Rafael Prieto Curiel ◽  
Mauricio Quiñones Domínguez ◽  
Eduardo Lora ◽  
Neave O'Clery

Abstract People changing residence within their own country is the most common type of migration and is one of the main driving forces of a country's demography. Yet, due to a lack of data and tools, some key characteristics of internal migration such as the propensity to remain in the same city or to return to previous locations are frequently ignored. Here, a network-based model of city-to-city migration is constructed, where the movement of individuals is modelled using the frequency of distinct network motifs. We fit this model to longitudinal data on 3.3 million workers in Colombia, including 1.4 million migrations, and compare the motif frequency based on migration and return rates between men and women, and between distinct age and income groups. Results show that the majority of people do not move in general, but that there is a small group which exhibits frequent migration, particularly the young and male. Nearly three out of four times that a person moves, they are going back to a previous city, although women and mature people are less likely to move and more likely to return if they actually move. At a city level, different onward and return migration patterns are observed, whereby people from small secondary towns are more likely to leave and not return than people from large metropolitan areas like Bogotá or Medellín.

2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. e26149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Pullen ◽  
Katja E Jaeger ◽  
Philip A Wigge ◽  
Richard J Morris

1979 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 235-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Ugalde ◽  
Frank D. Bean ◽  
Gilbert Cárdenas

The Dominican migration to the United States has been primarily directed to the New York area. The officially reported addresses given by Dominican aliens to the INS suggest a heavy concentration in the New York/New Jersey region. Using survey data, this study seeks to provide a profile of international Dominican migrants most of whom come to the United States. Reasons for migration by age, sex, and social strata are discussed, and an examination of return migration patterns is presented.


1999 ◽  
Vol 72 (10) ◽  
pp. 645-667 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuji ESAKI ◽  
Yoshio ARAI ◽  
Taro KAWAGUCHI

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Rebecca A. Lenihan

<p><b>While New Zealand has been described as more Scottish than any other country beyond Scotland, and Scots consistently made up nearly 20 per cent of the immigrant population of New Zealand to 1920, as a group New Zealand's Scots migrants have remained relatively blurred. The distinctive national backgrounds of New Zealand's British migrants have seldom been recognised in general histories or in specialist studies of migration to the country, migrants having tended to be categorised as 'British' and 'Non-British', leading to what Akenson aptly described as the 'lumpingof all white settlers into a spurious unity.' This thesis, conceived as part of a larger research project investigating the experiences and contributions of Scots in New Zealand, seeks to establish key characteristics of the Scottish migrants arriving between 1840 and 1920. Five core questions are addressed: 'from where in Scotland did they come?', 'who came?', 'when?', 'in what numbers?', and 'where did they settle?'.</b></p> <p>While previous studies have suggested partial answers to some of these questions, the present research offers a more full and detailed profile of New Zealand's Scots migrants than has previously been available. Critically, it takes the earlier findings further. Though the investigation has been based primarily upon statistical analysis ofa genealogically-sourced database of 6,612 migrants, quantitative analysis has beensupplemented by qualitative case studies. Comparison with a second set of data derived from death certificates has enabled a testing of the validity of genealogical data as a source for migration studies. In addition to the five central questions around which the thesis is structured, the study also addresses issues of internal migration within Scotland, emigration to otherdestinations prior to arrival in New Zealand, individual and generational occupationalmobility, chain and cluster migration among Shetland migrants, and return migration.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Moinuddin Bhuiyan

Advances in wireless technology and mobile computing have provided a major impetus towards development of P2P network over MANET. Both peer-to-peer overlays and mobile ad-hoc network share the key characteristics of self-organizing and decentralization; both need to solve same fundamental problem, that is, how to route queries or packets efficiently. Congestion affecting the performance of P2P overlay on wireless ad-hoc network occurs not only due to buffer overflow but also due to error prone nature of the wireless medium used and the mobility of users. When paths of multiple downloading sessions intersect with each other, they mutually cause congestion for each other that result in packet drops. We identified that P2P MANET suffers query performance primarily due to significant congestion during download session. The unawareness of congestion in P2P MANET system may lead to the longer user response time, high overhead and many packet losses. In order to alleviate the congestion problem, we propose a modification to RAON, CANON, which includes congestion awareness for improving the RAON performance. We evaluated our system through simulation, which shows that CAON improves the performance of query success rate, query delay, packet losses significantly. We also evaluated the impact of mobility model on our system by simulating under both Random way point mobility model and Manhattan mobility model.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 208-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Jones ◽  
Robert Pergl ◽  
Rob Hooft ◽  
Tomasz Miksa ◽  
Robert Samors ◽  
...  

Effective stewardship of data is a critical precursor to making data FAIR. The goal of this paper is to bring an overview of current state of the art of data management and data stewardship planning solutions (DMP). We begin by arguing why data management is an important vehicle supporting adoption and implementation of the FAIR principles, we describe the background, context and historical development, as well as major driving forces, being research initiatives and funders. Then we provide an overview of the current leading DMP tools in the form of a table presenting the key characteristics. Next, we elaborate on emerging common standards for DMPs, especially the topic of machine-actionable DMPs. As sound DMP is not only a precursor of FAIR data stewardship, but also an integral part of it, we discuss its positioning in the emerging FAIR tools ecosystem. Capacity building and training activities are an important ingredient in the whole effort. Although not being the primary goal of this paper, we touch also the topic of research workforce support, as tools can be just as much effective as their users are competent to use them properly. We conclude by discussing the relations of DMP to FAIR principles, as there are other important connections than just being a precursor.


2019 ◽  
pp. 125-140
Author(s):  
Bilal Malaeb ◽  
Jackline Wahba

This chapter provides overall evidence of the migration dynamics in Jordan between 2010 and 2016, a period with a large influx of Syrian refugees. It gives a detailed description of immigration with particular focus on the composition, characteristics and labor market activities of immigrants in Jordan. It examines emigration and return migration patterns of Jordanians and the changes in their migration dynamics before and after the Syrian refugee inflow. The chapter provides evidence that temporary international migration of Jordanians decreased, and that almost half of current emigrants had left Jordan with their entire family, suggesting a trend towards permanent migration. It finds that return migration decreased between the two years and also finds a change in immigrants’ geographical distribution in 2016 compared to 2010, with a decreased proportion in Amman. Despite similar distribution across occupations of immigrants and refugees in 2016, a lower share of immigrants in sectors like manufacturing is found, in which refugees were concentrated. Immigrants themselves engaged more in informal work in 2010 relative to 2016 and differed in occupations and economic activities, suggesting that immigrants may have been affected by the refugee influx.


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