Abstract
Comparing the level or amount of migration within different countries has been a longstanding problem because the local administrative areas commonly used as the basis for measuring migration vary greatly in size and significance within and between countries. Distance moved is a critical aspect of most concepts of migration, and measuring it would facilitate cross-national comparisons. Apparently only the United States, Great Britain, and Sweden have measured migration distances for the country as a whole, and this information is used as the basis for comparative analysis of spatial mobility. © 1988 Population Association of America.
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CITATION STYLE
Long, L., Tucker, C. J., & Urton, W. L. (1988). Migration distances: An international comparison. Demography, 25(4), 633–640. https://doi.org/10.2307/2061327
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