Volume 50 - Article 4 | Pages 115–130
Mind the gap: Exploring urban–rural differences in US inter-county migration decisions
By Anqi Xu
References
Burnett, J. (2022). Americans are fleeing to places where political views match their own. Washington, D.C: National Public Radio.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2017). NCHS urban-rural classification scheme for counties. Hyattsville: National Center for Health Statistics.
Clark, W.A. and Maas, R. (2015). Interpreting migration through the prism of reasons for moves. Population, Space and Place 21(1): 54–67.
Fafard St-Germain, A. and Tarasuk, V. (2020). Homeownership status and risk of food insecurity: Examining the role of housing debt, housing expenditure and housing asset using a cross-sectional population-based survey of Canadian households. International Journal for Equity in Health 19(1): 1–12.
Frost, R. (2023). Did more people move during the pandemic? Cambridge: Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies.
Gimpel, J.G., Lovin, N., Moy, B., and Reeves, A. (2020). The urban–rural gulf in American political behavior. Political Behavior 42(4): 1343–1368.
Golding, S.A. and Winkler, R.L. (2020). Tracking urbanization and exurbs: Migration across the rural–urban continuum, 1990–2016. Population Research and Policy Review 39(5): 835–859.
Hankinson, M. (2018). When do renters behave like homeowners? High rent, price anxiety, and NIMBYism. American Political Science Review 112(3): 473–493.
Hedman, L. (2013). Moving near family? The influence of extended family on neighbourhood choice in an intra‐urban context. Population, Space and Place 19(1): 32–45.
Ho, P.Y., Low, S.T., Wee, S.C., and Choong, W.W. (2020). Thematic analysis of short-term renter preferences for housing market in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: A case study of Airbnb. International Journal of Housing Markets and Analysis 13(5): 825–844.
Huang, Y., South, S.J., Spring, A., and Crowder, K. (2021). Life-course exposure to neighborhood poverty and migration between poor and non-poor neighborhoods. Population Research and Policy Review 40(3): 401–429.
Johnson, K.M. (2023). Population redistribution trends in nonmetropolitan America, 2010 to 2021. Rural Sociology 88(1): 193–219.
Jokela, M. (2022). Urban–rural residential mobility associated with political party affiliation: The U.S. National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth and Young Adults. Social Psychological and Personality Science 13(1): 83–90.
Lichter, D.T. and Johnson, K.M. (2023). Urbanization and the paradox of rural population decline: Racial and regional variation. Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World 9.
Modestino, A.S. and Dennett, J. (2013). Are American homeowners locked into their houses? The impact of housing market conditions on state-to-state migration. Regional Science and Urban Economics 43(2): 322–337.
Molloy, R., Smith, C.L., and Wozniak, A. (2011). Internal migration in the United States. Journal of Economic Perspectives 25(3): 173–196.
Pandit, K. (1994). Differentiating between subsystems and typologies in the analysis of migration regions: A U.S. example. The Professional Geographer 46(3): 331–345.
Plane, D.A. and Jurjevich, J.R. (2009). Ties that no longer bind? The patterns and repercussions of age-articulated migration. The Professional Geographer 61(1): 4–20.
Schouten, A. (2021). Residential mobility and the geography of low-income households. Urban Studies 58(9): 1846–1865.
Stawarz, N., Sander, N., and Sulak, H. (2021). Internal migration and housing costs: A panel analysis for Germany. Population, Space and Place 27(4): 2412.
Thomas, M., Gillespie, B., and Lomax, N. (2019). Variations in migration motives over distance. Demographic Research 40(38): 1097–1110.
Withers, S.D., Clark, W.A.V., and Ruiz, T. (2008). Demographic variation in housing cost adjustments with US family migration. Population, Space and Place 14(4): 305–325.