The Role of Family and Friends in Return Migration and Its Labor Market Outcomes

[1]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Measuring migration motives with open‐ended survey data: Methodological and conceptual issues , 2021, Population, space and place.

[2]  C. Mulder,et al.  Migration after union dissolution in the United States: The role of non-resident family , 2021, Social science research.

[3]  C. Mulder,et al.  Young Adults’ Migration to Cities in Sweden: Do Siblings Pave the Way? , 2020, Demography.

[4]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Intergenerational solidarity, proximity to parents when moving to independence, and returns to the parental home , 2020 .

[5]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Migration for family and labour market outcomes in Sweden , 2020, Population studies.

[6]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Geographic mobility among older people and their adult children: The role of parents' health issues and family ties , 2020, Population, space and place.

[7]  C. Mulder,et al.  Young adults' return migration from large cities in Sweden: The role of siblings and parents , 2020, Population, space and place.

[8]  A. Findlay,et al.  Boomerang Behaviour and Emerging Adulthood: Moving Back to the Parental Home and the Parental Neighbourhood in Sweden , 2020, European Journal of Population.

[9]  L. Dommermuth,et al.  Internal Migration and the Role of Intergenerational Family Ties and Life Events , 2020 .

[10]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Nonresident family as a motive for migration , 2020 .

[11]  F. Billari,et al.  Leaving home, moving to college, and returning home: Economic outcomes in the United States , 2019, Population, Space and Place.

[12]  Brian Joseph Gillespie Adolescent Intergenerational Relationship Dynamics and Leaving and Returning to the Parental Home , 2019, Journal of marriage and the family.

[13]  A. Zorlu,et al.  Spatial trajectories in early life: Moving on or returning home? , 2019, Population, Space and Place.

[14]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Variations in migration motives over distance , 2019, Demographic Research.

[15]  Michael J. Thomas Employment, education, and family: Revealing the motives behind internal migration in Great Britain , 2019, Population, space and place.

[16]  C. Mulder Putting family centre stage: Ties to nonresident family, internal migration, and immobility , 2018, Demographic Research.

[17]  R. Skeldon Internal Migration in the Developed World: Are We Becoming Less Mobile? , 2018, Population studies.

[18]  Cary Wu,et al.  Does Migration Pay Off?: Returnees, Family Background, and Self-Employment in Rural China , 2018 .

[19]  M. Bell,et al.  Global trends in internal migration , 2017 .

[20]  W. Clark,et al.  Human Capital Theory and Internal Migration: Do Average Outcomes Distort Our View of Migrant Motives? , 2017, Migration letters : an international journal of migration studies.

[21]  Martin Kolk A Life-Course Analysis of Geographical Distance to Siblings, Parents, and Grandparents in Sweden , 2017 .

[22]  M. Bell,et al.  Internal migration age patterns and the transition to adulthood: Australia and Great Britain compared , 2016 .

[23]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Close adult friendships, gender, and the life cycle , 2015 .

[24]  Brian Joseph Gillespie,et al.  Homophily, Close Friendship, and Life Satisfaction among Gay, Lesbian, Heterosexual, and Bisexual Men and Women , 2015, PloS one.

[25]  J. Cromartie,et al.  Impacts of Return Migration on Rural U.S. Communities , 2014 .

[26]  J. Stone,et al.  Gender, Turning Points, and Boomerangs: Returning Home in Young Adulthood in Great Britain , 2014, Demography.

[27]  J. Cromartie,et al.  Reasons for Returning and Not Returning to Rural U.S. Communities , 2014 .

[28]  T. Haartsen,et al.  The success–failure dichotomy revisited: young adults' motives to return to their rural home region , 2014 .

[29]  C. Mulder,et al.  The regional dimension of intergenerational proximity in the Netherlands , 2013 .

[30]  T. Wall,et al.  Divorce as an Influence in Return Migration to Rural Areas , 2013 .

[31]  T. Champion Testing the return migration element of the 'escalator region' model: an analysis of migration into and out of south-east England, 1966--2001 , 2012 .

[32]  J. Cromartie,et al.  Returning Home and Making a Living: Employment Strategies of Return Migrants to Rural U.S. Communities , 2011 .

[33]  Thomas Niedomysl,et al.  Why return migrants return: survey evidence of motives for internal return migration in Sweden , 2011 .

[34]  Thomas Niedomysl How Migration Motives Change over Migration Distance: Evidence on Variation across Socio-economic and Demographic Groups , 2011 .

[35]  F. Poulin,et al.  Friendship stability and change in childhood and adolescence , 2010 .

[36]  G. Malmberg,et al.  Adult children and elderly parents as mobility attractions in Sweden , 2009 .

[37]  C. Mulder,et al.  Distance to family members and relocations of older adults , 2009 .

[38]  Michèle Belot,et al.  Friendship ties and geographical mobility: evidence from Great Britain , 2009 .

[39]  C. Mulder,et al.  Distance to parents and geographical mobility , 2008 .

[40]  M. Voorpostel,et al.  Support Between Siblings and Between Friends: Two Worlds Apart? , 2007 .

[41]  Christopher E. Beaudoin,et al.  Social Capital in Rural and Urban Communities: Testing Differences in Media Effects and Models , 2004 .

[42]  W. Clark,et al.  Leaving home and leaving the State: evidence from the United States , 2000 .

[43]  D. Reher Family Ties in Western Europe: Persistent Contrasts , 1998 .

[44]  David C. Maré,et al.  Cities and Skills , 1994, Journal of Labor Economics.

[45]  G. Rudzitis,et al.  Multinomial logistic models explaining income changes of migrants to high-amenity counties. , 1992, The Review of regional studies.

[46]  A. Josephson,et al.  Of Human Bonding—Parent-Child Relations across the Life Course , 1992 .

[47]  A. Fielding Migration and social mobility: South East England as an escalator region. , 1991, Regional studies.

[48]  J. Cromartie,et al.  Reinterpretation of black return and nonreturn migration to the South 1975-1980. , 1989 .

[49]  J. Davanzo Repeat migration, information costs, and location-specific capital , 1981 .

[50]  P. A. Morrison,et al.  Return and other sequences of migration in the United States , 1981, Demography.

[51]  L. Sjaastad The Costs and Returns of Human Migration , 1962, Journal of Political Economy.

[52]  K. Refsgaard,et al.  State of the Nordic Region 2020 , 2020 .

[53]  John Östh,et al.  Sweden: internal migration in a high-migration Nordic country , 2017 .

[54]  Brian Joseph Gillespie Mobility Effects and Cumulative Mobility Contexts , 2017 .

[55]  J. Cromartie,et al.  Intergenerational Relationships and Rural Return Migration , 2013 .

[56]  E. Lundholm,et al.  Returning home? Migration to birthplace among migrants after age 55 , 2012 .

[57]  K. Newbold,et al.  Characterization of Primary , Return , and Onward Interprovincial Migration in Canada : Overall and Age-Specifie Patterns , 2010 .

[58]  Bo Malmberg,et al.  Do open‐ended survey questions on migration motives create coder variability problems? , 2009 .

[59]  Thierry Debrand,et al.  Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe , 2007 .

[60]  C. Mulder,et al.  Geographical distances between family members , 2006 .

[61]  Stephen J. Conroy,et al.  Reciprocity in parent-child relations over the adult life course. , 2002, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.