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Location, location? A critical examination of patterns and determinants of internal mobility among post-accession Polish migrants in the UK

Location, location? A critical examination of patterns and determinants of internal mobility among post-accession Polish migrants in the UK
Location, location? A critical examination of patterns and determinants of internal mobility among post-accession Polish migrants in the UK
This article adds to literatures bridging the divide between internal and international migrations by investigating patterns of internal mobility following the international move of post-accession Polish migrants to the UK. Our analysis is based on a large-scale qualitative study carried out among 83 Polish migrants living in urban and rural locations in England and Scotland. We analyse the reasons behind their initial choice of location in the destination country and the propensity for subsequent internal mobility after arriving in the UK. We consider the role of family characteristics, migration channels, and time in the spatial moves the migrants undertake. In our analysis, we differentiate between residential mobility (which was generally very high among our study participants) and internal mobility (undertaken by one-third of our sample). Our research findings indicate that migrants who arrive through recruitment agencies and do not have children (with them in Britain) are the most internally mobile, whereas those who arrive through personal networks (of family, friends, or acquaintances) and with (especially school-age) children are the least likely to relocate after arriving in the UK. Moreover, it appears that migrants with families are more willing to make urban to rural moves, whereas young and childless migrants favour rural to urban relocations. Notably, the internal migration of some of our (childless) study participants was sometimes interspersed with short-term return migration. Finally, the general propensity to move internally seems to decrease with time: once the migrants secure permanent employment and stable accommodation, they are less willing to uproot again.
international migration, internal migration, post-accession polish migrants, the uk
1544-8444
671-687
Trevena, Paulina
ea357454-39d9-4065-a4c7-8f77fed75760
McGhee, Derek
63b8ae1e-8a71-470c-b780-2f0a95631902
Heath, Sue
f4df85b4-fdde-4353-8641-08a4b9fbbcae
Trevena, Paulina
ea357454-39d9-4065-a4c7-8f77fed75760
McGhee, Derek
63b8ae1e-8a71-470c-b780-2f0a95631902
Heath, Sue
f4df85b4-fdde-4353-8641-08a4b9fbbcae

Trevena, Paulina, McGhee, Derek and Heath, Sue (2013) Location, location? A critical examination of patterns and determinants of internal mobility among post-accession Polish migrants in the UK. Population, Space and Place, 19 (6), 671-687. (doi:10.1002/psp.1788).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article adds to literatures bridging the divide between internal and international migrations by investigating patterns of internal mobility following the international move of post-accession Polish migrants to the UK. Our analysis is based on a large-scale qualitative study carried out among 83 Polish migrants living in urban and rural locations in England and Scotland. We analyse the reasons behind their initial choice of location in the destination country and the propensity for subsequent internal mobility after arriving in the UK. We consider the role of family characteristics, migration channels, and time in the spatial moves the migrants undertake. In our analysis, we differentiate between residential mobility (which was generally very high among our study participants) and internal mobility (undertaken by one-third of our sample). Our research findings indicate that migrants who arrive through recruitment agencies and do not have children (with them in Britain) are the most internally mobile, whereas those who arrive through personal networks (of family, friends, or acquaintances) and with (especially school-age) children are the least likely to relocate after arriving in the UK. Moreover, it appears that migrants with families are more willing to make urban to rural moves, whereas young and childless migrants favour rural to urban relocations. Notably, the internal migration of some of our (childless) study participants was sometimes interspersed with short-term return migration. Finally, the general propensity to move internally seems to decrease with time: once the migrants secure permanent employment and stable accommodation, they are less willing to uproot again.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 8 May 2013
Published date: November 2013
Keywords: international migration, internal migration, post-accession polish migrants, the uk
Organisations: Social Statistics & Demography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 353319
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/353319
ISSN: 1544-8444
PURE UUID: 63b3ea6d-b4a7-49f5-bbe8-618b39d147a1
ORCID for Derek McGhee: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3226-6300

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Date deposited: 05 Jun 2013 09:33
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:04

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Contributors

Author: Paulina Trevena
Author: Derek McGhee ORCID iD
Author: Sue Heath

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