The Demopædia Encyclopedia on Population is under heavy modernization and maintenance. Outputs could look bizarre, sorry for the temporary inconvenience
Multilingual Demographic Dictionary, second unified edition, English volume
Local moves
{{Lang translation -{{{Lang}}}}} | |
---|---|
{{Lang section -{{{Lang}}}}} | [[:{{{Lang}}}-:80#803|{{Lang name -{{{Lang}}}}} 803]] {{{content}}} |
The population of a sovereign country (305-3) may be involved in internal migration 1 when both place of departure (801-4) and place of destination (801-5) are within the country, or in international migration 2 which occurs across national boundaries. The term external migration 3 is sometimes encountered in the latter sense. International migration is called immigration 4 or emigration 5 according to whether the country in question is the country of destination or the country of origin, respectively. When the country is divided into sub-areas, movement within the boundaries of each sub-area are local moves 6 and constitute residential mobility 6, while movement between sub-areas is called in-migration 7 or out-migration 8 depending on whether the sub-area considered is the place of destination or the place of origin for the migrants. A migration stream 9 is a group of migrants having a common origin and destination. The larger stream between two sub-areas is called the dominant stream 10 and the smaller the counterstream 11.
- 1. The definitions of migration in this paragraph can be extended to the migrants involved. The distinction between internal and international migration is not always precise when territories within a country are more or less autonomous.
- 2. Simple commuting across a national border receives the name of border traffic, and should not be mistaken for international migration.
- 4. Immigration, n. - immigrate, v. - immigrant, n. and adj.
- 5. Emigration, n. - emigrate, v. - emigrant, n. and adj.