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White Migration and Socio-Economic Differences Between Cities and Suburbs
40
Citations
1
References
1964
Year
Human MigrationUrban GeographyEconomicsLarge Metropolitan AreasUrban SocietyPopulation InequalityWhite MigrationSociologyUrban EconomicsBusinessPopulation MigrationSpatial DemographySuburban RingsDemographyLarge CitiesPublic HealthPopulation MovementImmigration
Large cities are apparently becoming increasingly differentiated from their suburban rings in socio-economic status. It has been speculated that this results from an influx of low-status migrants to cities and an outflow of high-status persons from cities to suburbs. Analysis of census data on migration patterns between 1955 and 1960 for 12 large metropolitan areas indicates a different and more complex pattern. Nearly all streams of migrants are of higher average socio-economic status than non-migrants. Large cities contribute to their suburbs and to other metropolitan areas more high-status migrants than they receive, whereas suburban rings receive more high-status migrants than they lose. This circulation of persons of higher levels of educational attainment and occupational status has the net effect of diminishing the socio-economic level of central city populations and augmenting the socio-economic level of suburban populations.
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