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Recent Immigrant Settlement in the Nonmetropolitan United States: Evidence from Internal Census Data*
85
Citations
39
References
2007
Year
EthnicityHuman MigrationEmigrationGlobal MigrationEducationInternal MigrationNonmetropolitan United StatesMigration (Business Information Systems)Recent Immigrant SettlementDemographic MeasurementsPublic HealthMigration PolicyStatisticsNonmetropolitan AreasDemographic ChangeU.s. CommunitiesGeographyPopulation MigrationMigration (Educational Migration)Population HistoryInternational Population MovementSociologyAnthropologySpatial DemographyDemographyPopulation MovementImmigrant HealthImmigration
A bstract In the 1990s, studies have documented widespread growth of immigrants in U.S. communities not known as common destinations in the past. This trend has fueled population growth in some nonmetropolitan areas and offset population decline in other areas. In this paper, we examine the implications of recent foreign born in‐migration for rural America. Our focus is on a collection of 59 nonmetropolitan counties where growth in foreign born stock offset declines in U.S. native population and resulted in increased local population by 2000. To understand these nonmetropolitan offset counties, we use confidential Census Bureau data that offer us the detailed geography and larger sample size needed to closely examine spatial shifts in the foreign born population, especially those recently arrived. Our findings illustrate dramatic compositional shifts in the populations of these areas, and suggest new demographic complexity in nonmetropolitan areas in the 21 st century.
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