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Rural Out-Migration: Community Consequences and Individual Migrant Experiences


Author Aileen Stockdale
Year
2004
Region
In the territorial limits of the Alpine Convention.
Country
eu (Europe without alps)
Type of publication
reviewed
Topics
  • Governance capacity

Abstract
This article examined the socio-economic impacts of out-migration on rural communities and rural families. Individual out-migrants were traced using a variety of methods. Data obtained provides new insights into the migration histories and experiences of individual out-migrants. Significant findings include: the out-migration of young people is not only expected but often encouraged among rural families, the out-migration experience is highly variable, family and community ties remain strong following the act of migration, most out-migrants lead successful lives becoming highly qualified, and few have definite plans to return to the host area. Importantly it is only by leaving the rural areas that individuals acquire the necessary social capital to aid rural regeneration, but few rural communities actually benefit.
Journal / Publisher / Institution
Sociologia Ruralis
Issue / Volume / Number
Volume 44, No. 2/2004, p. 167-194
Reference to the original publication
hardcopy
Remarks
Socio-economic impacts of out-migration on rural communities and rural families; diversity and variability of histories and experiences of individual out-migrants; strength of family and community ties; going away to increase personal social capital, and potentially, rural social capital, but few of out-migrants come back.

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