Multiregional Migration Projection
Multiregional migration projection extends the classic cohort-component method from a single closed population to a system of several regions that exchange migrants. Developed principally by Andrei Rogers in his 1975 Introduction to Multiregional Mathematical Demography, it replaces the ordinary Leslie matrix with a generalized growth matrix whose blocks carry not only survival and fertility within each region but also the age-specific probabilities of moving from every region to every other. Advancing a stacked population vector — population by age for each region — through repeated multiplication by this matrix projects all regions simultaneously and consistently, so that an out-migrant from one region becomes an in-migrant somewhere else and the system stays closed. The same matrix yields multistate life-table quantities such as expected lifetime spent in each region and the long-run stable spatial distribution of the population. Because the method demands smooth age-specific migration inputs, it is usually paired with Rogers-Castro model schedules, and the comparative findings of Rogers and Willekens's 1986 Migration and Settlement project established it as the standard apparatus of formal spatial demography.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Rogers, A. (1975). Introduction to Multiregional Mathematical Demography. John Wiley & Sons, New York. · ISBN 9780471729945
- Rogers, A., & Willekens, F. J. (Eds.). (1986). Migration and Settlement: A Multiregional Comparative Study. D. Reidel, Dordrecht. · ISBN 9789027721570
- Rogers, A., & Castro, L. J. (1981). Model Migration Schedules. IIASA Research Report RR-81-30. · URL
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Related methods
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