Internal migration

Movement of people for resettlement within a country


title: "Internal migration" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["internal-migration", "human-migration", "demographic-economics"] description: "Movement of people for resettlement within a country" topic_path: "economics" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_migration" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Movement of people for resettlement within a country ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c3/The_Nyirangongo_volcano,_one_of_the_most_active_in_the_Great_Lakes_region,_erupted_on_Saturday,_May_22,causing_the_displacement_of_populations_who_feared_for_their_safety(51229714585).jpg" caption="The impact from volcanic eruption of [[Mount Nyiragongo]] has caused domestic migration in [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] population."] ::

Internal migration or domestic migration is human migration within a country. Internal migration tends to be travel for education and for economic improvement or because of a natural disaster or civil disturbance, though a study based on the full formal economy of the United States found that the median post-move rise in income was only 1%.

A general trend of rural-to-urban migration, in a process described as urbanisation, has also produced a form of internal migration.

Internal migration is often contrasted with cross-border or international migration.

History

Many countries have experienced massive internal migration.

Secondary migration

A subtype of internal migration is the migration of immigrant groups often called secondary or onward migration. Secondary migration is also used to refer to the migration of immigrants within the European Union.

In the United States, the Office of Refugee Resettlement, a program of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services's Administration for Children and Families, is tasked with managing the secondary migration of resettled refugees. However, there is little information on secondary migration and associated programmatic structural changes. Secondary migration has been hypothesised as one of the driving forces behind the distribution of resettled refugees in the United States.

Methods for analysing internal migration

Various methodologies are proposed and used in the literature to analyse internal migration. Ravenstein used extensive cartographies to detail migration patterns. Slater employed networks to model migration. Goldade et al. employed geographical bounds and political afliation of communities, in addition to utilizing network structures. Gursoy and Badur proposed signed network analysis, ego network analysis, representation learning, temporal stability analysis, community detection, and network visualization methods tailored for internal migration data and made their software available.

References

References

  1. (2019-11-27). "World Migration Report 2020". IOM World Migration Report.
  2. [[Ben Klemens]]. (June 2021). "An Analysis of U.S. Domestic Migration via Subset-stable Measures of Administrative Data". Journal of Computational Social Science.
  3. (2022-06-10). "Urbanization and migration".
  4. O'Neal, Matthew. "Great Migration".
  5. Frey, William H.. "New Great Migration: Black Americans Return South".
  6. "Learn About the Great Hunger at Ireland's Great Hunger Museum".
  7. Signoretta, Paola. "Italy - Economic Miracle, Post-WWII, Industrialization {{!}} Britannica". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  8. (14 July 2011). "Economia e baixa natalidade diminuem migração interna no Brasil". BBC News Brasil.
  9. Scheineson, Andrew. "China’s Internal Migrants {{!}} Council on Foreign Relations".
  10. (March 17, 1980). "Public Law 96-212: 96th Congress".
  11. (17 March 1980). "1980 Refugee Act".
  12. (September 2011). "Get up and go: Refugee resettlement and secondary migration in the USA".
  13. (7 April 2014). "Organization-Led Migration, Individual Choice, and Refugee Resettlement in the US: Seeking Regularities". Geographical Review.
  14. Ravenstein, E. G.. (1885). "The Laws of Migration". Journal of the Statistical Society of London.
  15. Slater, P B. (December 1976). "A Multiterminal Network-Flow Analysis of an Unadjusted Spanish Interprovincial Migration Table". Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space.
  16. (2018). "Complex Networks & Their Applications VI". Springer International Publishing.
  17. (2022-10-06). "Investigating internal migration with network analysis and latent space representations: an application to Turkey". Social Network Analysis and Mining.
  18. Gursoy, Furkan. (2022-03-26). "Investigating internal migration with network analysis and latent space representations: An application to Turkey". Social Network Analysis and Mining.

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internal-migrationhuman-migrationdemographic-economics