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).

Download reference:

Australian Bureau of Statistics (2009). TableBuilder. Canberra.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Bates, J. and Bracken, I. (1982). Estimation of migration profiles in England and Wales. Environment and Planning A 14(7): 889-900.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Bell, M. (1995). Internal Migration in Australia 1986-1991: Overview Report. Canberra.

Download reference:

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.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Blakers, R., Bill, A., Maclachlan, M. , and Karmel, T. (2003). Mobility: Why Do University Students Move? Canberra: Department of Education, Science and Training.

Download reference:

Congdon, P. (1993). Statistical graduation in local demographic analysis and projections. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A 152(2): 237-270.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Courgeau, D. (1979). Migrants and migrations. Population Selected Papers 3: 1-35.

Download reference:

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).

Weblink:
Download reference:

Ishikawa, Y. (2001). Migration turnarounds and schedule changes in Japan, Sweden and Canada. Review of Urban and Regional Development Studies 13(1): 20-33.

Download reference:

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.

Download reference:

Peristera, P. and Kostaki, A. (2007). Modeling fertility in modern populations. Demographic Research 16(6): 141-194.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Plane, D.A. and Heins, F. (2003). Age articulation of US inter-metropolitan migration flows. The Annals of Regional Science 37(1): 107-130.

Download reference:

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.

Download reference:

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).

Weblink:
Download reference:

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.

Download reference:

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.

Download reference:

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.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Rogers, A. (1988). Age patterns of elderly migration: an international comparison. Demography 25(3): 355-370.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Rogers, A. (1986). Parameterized multistate population dynamics and projections. Journal of the American Statistical Association 81(393): 48-61.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Rogers, A. (1976). Shrinking large-scale population projection models by aggregation and decomposition. Environment and Planning A 8(5): 515-541.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Rogers, A. and Castro, L.J. (1981). Model Migration Schedules. Laxenburg: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (Research Report RR-81-30).

Download reference:

Rogers, A., Castro, L.J, and Lea, M. (2005). Model migration schedules: three alternative linear estimation methods. Mathematical Population Studies 12(1).

Weblink:
Download reference:

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.

Download reference:

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.

Weblink:
Download reference:

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.

Download reference:

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).

Download reference:

Rogers, A., Racquillet, R., and Castro, L.J. (1978). Model migration schedules and their applications. Environment and Planning A 10(5): 475-502.

Weblink:
Download reference:

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.

Weblink:
Download reference:

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).

Weblink:
Download reference:

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.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Sander, N. (2010). Retirement migration in Australia. [PhD thesis in preparation]. Brisbane: The University of Queensland, School of Geography, Planning and Environmental Management.

Download reference:

Schofer, E. and Meyer, J.W. (2005). The worldwide expansion of higher education in the twentieth century. American Sociological Review 70(6): 898-920.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Back to the article