Volume 23 - Article 8 | Pages 191–222
Model migration schedules incorporating student migration peaks
By Tom Wilson
References
Australian Bureau of Statistics (2006). How Australia Takes a Census. Canberra: Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS Catalogue Number 2903.0).
Australian Bureau of Statistics (2009). TableBuilder. Canberra.
Bates, J. and Bracken, I. (1982). Estimation of migration profiles in England and Wales. Environment and Planning A 14(7): 889-900.
Bell, M. (1995). Internal Migration in Australia 1986-1991: Overview Report. Canberra.
Bell, M. and Rees, P. (2006). Comparing migration in Britain and Australia: harmonisation through use of age-time plans. Environment and Planning A 38(5): 959-988.
Blakers, R., Bill, A., Maclachlan, M. , and Karmel, T. (2003). Mobility: Why Do University Students Move? Canberra: Department of Education, Science and Training.
Congdon, P. (1993). Statistical graduation in local demographic analysis and projections. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A 152(2): 237-270.
Courgeau, D. (1979). Migrants and migrations. Population Selected Papers 3: 1-35.
Freeman, R.B. (2009). What does global expansion of higher education mean for the US? Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER Working Paper 14962).
Ishikawa, Y. (2001). Migration turnarounds and schedule changes in Japan, Sweden and Canada. Review of Urban and Regional Development Studies 13(1): 20-33.
Mills, J. (2006). Student Residential Mobility in Australia – An Exploration of Higher Education-Related Migration. [Honours thesis]. Brisbane: The University of Queensland, School of Geography, Planning and Architecture.
Peristera, P. and Kostaki, A. (2007). Modeling fertility in modern populations. Demographic Research 16(6): 141-194.
Plane, D.A. and Heins, F. (2003). Age articulation of US inter-metropolitan migration flows. The Annals of Regional Science 37(1): 107-130.
Raymer, J. and Rogers, A. (2008). Applying model migration schedules to represent age-specific migration flows. In: Raymer, J. and Willekens, F. (eds.). International Migration in Europe: Data, Models and Estimates. Chichester: Wiley: 175-192.
Raymer, J. and Rogers, A. (2007). The American Community Survey’s interstate migration data: strategies for smoothing irregular age patterns. Southampton: Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute (Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute Methodology Working Paper M07/13).
Rees, P. (1996). Projecting the national and regional populations of the European Union using migration information. In: Rees, P., Convey, A., and Kupiszewski, M. (eds.). Population Migration in the European Union. Chichester: John Wiley: 331-364.
Rees, P. and Willekens, F. (1985). Data and accounts. In: Rogers, A. and Willekens, F.J. (eds.). Migration and Settlement: A Multiregional Comparative Study. Dordrecht: D Reidel.
Rees, P., Bell, M., Duke-Williams, O., and Blake, M. (2000). Problems and solutions in the measurement of migration intensities: Britain and Australia compared. Population Studies 54(2): 207-222.
Rogers, A. (1988). Age patterns of elderly migration: an international comparison. Demography 25(3): 355-370.
Rogers, A. (1986). Parameterized multistate population dynamics and projections. Journal of the American Statistical Association 81(393): 48-61.
Rogers, A. (1976). Shrinking large-scale population projection models by aggregation and decomposition. Environment and Planning A 8(5): 515-541.
Rogers, A. and Castro, L.J. (1981). Model Migration Schedules. Laxenburg: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (Research Report RR-81-30).
Rogers, A., Castro, L.J, and Lea, M. (2005). Model migration schedules: three alternative linear estimation methods. Mathematical Population Studies 12(1).
Rogers, A. and Castro, L.J. (1986). Migration. In: Rogers, A. and Willekens, F.J. (eds.). Migration and Settlement: A Multiregional Comparative Study. Dordrecht: D Reidel: 157-208.
Rogers, A. and Jones, B. (2008). Inferring directional migration propensities from the propensities of infants in the United States. Mathematical Population Studies 15(3): 182-211.
Rogers, A., Jones, B., and Ma, W. (2008). Repairing the migration data reported by the American Community Survey. Boulder: University of Colorado at Boulder, Institute of Behavioral Science, Working Paper, Population Program.
Rogers, A. and Planck, F. (1983). MODEL: A general program for estimating parameterized model schedules of fertility, mortality, migration and marital and labor force status transitions. Laxenburg: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (WP-83-102).
Rogers, A., Racquillet, R., and Castro, L.J. (1978). Model migration schedules and their applications. Environment and Planning A 10(5): 475-502.
Rogers, A. and Rajbhandary, S. (1997). Period and cohort age patterns of US migration, 1948-1993: Are American males migrating less? Population Research and Policy Review 16(6): 513-530.
Rogers, A. and Raymer, J. (1999). Fitting observed demographic rates with the multiexponential model schedule: an assessment of two estimation programs. Review of Urban and Regional Development Studies 11(1).
Rogers, A. and Watkins, J. (1987). General versus elderly interstate migration and population redistribution in the United States. Research on Aging 9(4): 483-529.
Sander, N. (2010). Retirement migration in Australia. [PhD thesis in preparation]. Brisbane: The University of Queensland, School of Geography, Planning and Environmental Management.
Schofer, E. and Meyer, J.W. (2005). The worldwide expansion of higher education in the twentieth century. American Sociological Review 70(6): 898-920.