Mixed motivations for migration in the urban prairies: A comparative approach |
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Authors: | Raymond F. Currie Shiva S. Halli |
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Affiliation: | 1. Dept. of Sociology, The University of Manitoba, R3T 2N2, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
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Abstract: | Two Canadian Prairie cities, with populations of about 600 000 each, have experienced dramatically different growth patterns in the last twenty years because of quite different economic bases. Edmonton has been a fast growth city based on the gas and oil boom. Winnipeg has experienced very slow growth with a very diversified economy. Through the vehicles of the Edmonton and Winnipeg Area Studies, an analysis of migration to the two cities is possible. It is a study of mixed motivation. Not only are single motives rarely expressed by respondents, but the relative strength of economic and family motives in particular is somewhat unexpected in the two cities. Finally, while return migration accounts for 50 percent of migrants to the slow growth city, it is not as detached from economic motives as appears to be the case in other Canadian research on return migration.Revised version of a paper presented at the Canadian Population Society Meeting, Hamilton, Ontario, June, 1987 |
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