| 1926 - 212 pages
...centres of commerce and industry." It followed from this that the process of migration was by stages. " The inhabitants of the country immediately surrounding...filled up by migrants from more remote districts." 1 The preponderance of short-distance movement by stages thus appears to be a permanent feature of... | |
| 1962 - 140 pages
...Zipf is generally credited with the formulation of the hypothesis that the total migration between two "The inhabitants of the country immediately surrounding...its influence felt, step by step, to the most remote corner of the kingdom." Ravenstein, op. cit . , XLVIII, 199. 2 Isard, op. cit. , p. 40. Isard's remark... | |
| Charles Butterworth - 1981 - 266 pages
...the "universal shifting" of population we alluded to in Chapter 2. The inhabitants of the countryside immediately surrounding a town of rapid growth flock into it; the gaps left in the rural population are filled by migrants from more remote distances. Stage migration The... | |
| Carolien Koopmans - 1992 - 344 pages
...uiteindelijk van het platteland naar de grote steden ging. "The inhabitants of the country immediatcly surrounding a town of rapid growth, flock into it; the gaps thus Icft in the niral population are filled up by migrants from more remote districts, until the attractive... | |
| O. W. A. Boonstra - 1993 - 500 pages
...ahsorption would go on in the following mannen The inhabitants of a county immediately surronnding a town of rapid growth flock into it; the gaps thus left in the rural population are fïlled up by migrants from more remote districts, nntil the attractive force of one of our rapidly... | |
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