Volume 34 - Article 25 | Pages 705–740
Pioneer settlement of U.S. immigrants: Characteristics of pioneer migrants and places
By Douglas Gurak, Mary M. Kritz
Abstract
Background: Research on immigrant dispersion to new U.S. destinations has not addressed the question of how place and individual characteristics influence pioneer settlement. While origin-group social networks influence immigrants’ settlement choices upon U.S. arrival and secondary destination decisions within the USA, other factors must be important when immigrants move to places where they have no compatriots.
Objective: By examining national origin differences in pioneer migration for ten Asian and Latin American national origin groups, our goal was to determine whether and how they differed in their pioneer settlement responses to economic, demographic, social, and pan-ethnic labor markets conditions.
Methods: We used 1990 and 2000 confidential decennial census data because they have sufficient sample cases and geographic detail to study national origin differences. We estimated two types of model for each origin group: a zero-inflated Poisson model that identifies the place characteristics associated with higher pioneer settlement counts in the 1990s and a logistic regression model that identifies the individual characteristics of immigrants who settled pioneer places.
Results: The major context correlates of pioneer settlement were 1990 population size, the pan-ethnic presence of foreign-born from each group’s origin region (Asia or Latin America), and the lack of a significant agricultural presence in the labor force. The logistic models indicated that pioneers were likely to be internal migrants rather than recent immigrants, fluent English speakers, and residents of relatively dispersed places prior to moving to pioneer labor markets.
Conclusions: The analyses showed the importance of secondary migration and prior dispersion from gateways for pioneer settlement. They also revealed considerable national origin heterogeneity in pioneer settlement dynamics and indicated that national origin differences merit further attention.
Author's Affiliation
- Douglas Gurak - Cornell University, United States of America EMAIL
- Mary M. Kritz - University of Wisconsin–Madison, United States of America EMAIL
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
The pitfalls and benefits of using administrative data for internal migration research: An evaluation of Australia’s Person Level Integrated Data Asset (PLIDA)
Volume 51 - Article 22
| Keywords:
administrative data,
Australia,
internal migration
The intergenerational transmission of migration capital: The role of family migration history and lived migration experiences
Volume 50 - Article 29
| Keywords:
childhood,
emigration,
Europe,
immigration,
life course
Mortality inequalities at retirement age between migrants and non-migrants in Denmark and Sweden
Volume 50 - Article 18
| Keywords:
immigration,
life expectancy,
lifespan inequality,
Nordic countries,
pension age,
pension policy
Cohort fertility of immigrants to Israel from the former Soviet Union
Volume 50 - Article 13
| Keywords:
age at first birth,
assimilation,
cohort analysis,
fertility,
immigration,
parity,
religiosity
Reducing uncertainty in Delphi surveys: A case study on immigration to the EU
Volume 49 - Article 36
| Keywords:
European Union,
immigration,
international migration,
migration flows
Cited References: 66
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar