Migration
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| the space within which daily activity occurs | ||
| migration of people to a specific location because relatives or members of the same nationality previously migrated there | ||
| pattern of movement from beginning around to original start location | ||
| The diminishing in importance and eventual disappearance of a phenomenon with increasing distance from its origin. | ||
| permanent movement compelled usually by cultural factors, human migration flows in which the movers have not choice but to relocate | ||
| A model that holds that the potential use of a service at a particular location is directly related to the number of people in a location and inversely related to the distance people must travel to reach the service. | ||
| Permanent movement within a particular country. | ||
| The presence of a nearer opportunity that greatly diminishes the attractiveness of sites farther away. | ||
| Permanent movement from one country to a different country on the same continent. | ||
| Permanent movement from one region of the country to another. | ||
| Permanent movement from suburbs and rural area to the urban city area. | ||
| movement that consists of one person migrating from one place to another | ||
| Migration involving temporary, recurrent relocation. Ex: military service, college, etc. | ||
| the distance people prefer in interactions with others | ||
| An individual's existing degree of satisfaction or dissatisfaction with a place. | ||
| a factor that causes people to leave their homelands and migrate to another region | ||
| a factor that draws or attracts people to another location | ||
| person who flees to another country to escape persecution or disaster | ||
| the reduction in the time it takes to diffuse something to a distant place, as a result of improved communications and transportation systems | ||
| migration to a distant destination that occurs in stages, for example, from farm to nearby village and later to a town and city | ||
| a seasonal periodic movement of pastoralists and their livestock between highland and lowland pastures | ||
| the relocation of people away from overpopulated core regions to less crowded areas. (Indonesia has a policy of moving people away from Java.) | ||
| movement in which people relocate in response to perceived opportunity; not forced. | ||
| Change in the migration pattern in a society that results from industrialization, population growth, and other social and economic changes that also produce the demographic transition. | ||
| Permanent movement within one region of a country. | ||
| migration from a place (especially migration from your native country in order to settle in another) | ||
| migration into a place (especially migration to a country of which you are not a native in order to settle there) | ||
| The loss of the best and brightest people to other countries |
