Indigenous labor supply, sustenance organization, and population redistribution in nonmetropolitan America: An extension of the ecological theory of migration
Open Access
- 1 November 1978
- journal article
- Published by Duke University Press in Demography
- Vol. 15 (4) , 637-641
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2061213
Abstract
The ecological theory of migration asserts that change in sustenance organization, to the extent that it produces changes in the opportunities for living, necessitates a change in population size. Migration may thus be viewed as a demographic response to the population’s need to reestablish a balance between its size and sustenance organization, thus attaining its best possible living standard. However, the levels of net in- or out-migration needed to restore the balance should be affected by the degree of positive or negative growth of the indigenous labor force population. We thus test the hypothesis that changes in opportunities for living will be balanced by net changes in the number of persons in the labor force, where this is a function of both indigenous labor supply and net migration.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Potential Change in Labor Force in the 1970-80 Decade for Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitian Counties in the United StatesPhylon (1960-), 1976
- Components of Sustenance Organization and Nonmetropolitan Population Change: a Human Ecological InvestigationAmerican Sociological Review, 1975
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- Determinants of Male Labor MobilityDemography, 1972
- Southern Negro Migration: Social and Economic Components of an Ecological ModelDemography, 1969