Comparar métodos
Revisa los métodos seleccionados uno junto a otro; las filas que difieren aparecen resaltadas.
| Rogers-Castro Migration Schedule× | Migration Effectiveness Index× | |
|---|---|---|
| Campo | Migration Studies | Migration Studies |
| Familia≠ | Regression model | Process / pipeline |
| Año de origen≠ | 1981 | 2002 |
| Autor original≠ | Andrei Rogers & Luis J. Castro | Martin Bell and colleagues |
| Tipo≠ | Parametric curve-fitting model for age-specific migration rates | Descriptive index of migration efficiency and impact |
| Fuente seminal≠ | Rogers, A., & Castro, L. J. (1981). Model Migration Schedules. IIASA Research Report RR-81-30. link ↗ | Bell, M., Blake, M., Boyle, P., Duke-Williams, O., Rees, P., Stillwell, J., & Hugo, G. (2002). Cross-national comparison of internal migration: issues and measures. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A, 165(3), 435-464. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | Model Migration Schedule, Rogers-Castro Curve, Multi-Exponential Migration Schedule, Age Profile of Migration | Migration Efficiency Index, Aggregate Net Migration Rate, ANMR, MEI |
| Relacionados | 3 | 3 |
| Resumen≠ | The Rogers-Castro migration schedule is a parametric model that captures the remarkably regular way migration rates vary with age. Across countries and eras, the probability of moving is high in infancy, falls through childhood, surges to a sharp peak in the early adult labour-force years, and often shows a secondary bump around retirement. Andrei Rogers and Luis Castro, working at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, formalized this regularity in their 1981 monograph as a sum of exponential and double-exponential curves whose parameters have direct demographic meaning. The simplest version uses seven parameters to describe the childhood decline and the labour-force peak; nine- and eleven-parameter extensions add retirement and post-retirement components. Fitting the schedule by nonlinear least squares smooths noisy age-specific rates, allows missing or sparse data to be filled in, and yields interpretable indices — the mean age of the labour-force peak, its sharpness, and the spacing between the childhood and labour curves. The result is a compact, comparable summary of an entire age profile of migration that feeds directly into multiregional projection and the analysis of migration selectivity. | The migration effectiveness index measures how efficiently the gross churning of people between regions actually redistributes population, by expressing net migration as a share of total migration turnover. Two regions can each exchange enormous numbers of migrants and yet end up with almost unchanged populations, because the inflows and outflows nearly cancel; the same net change could instead arise from a small, lopsided, highly directed flow. The effectiveness index distinguishes these cases: it runs from near zero, where gross flows are balanced and population is barely redistributed, toward one hundred, where migration is so one-directional that almost every move contributes to net change. Martin Bell and colleagues codified this measure in their influential 2002 framework for cross-national comparison of internal migration, alongside companion indices of overall migration intensity and the aggregate net migration rate, which combines intensity and effectiveness into a single summary of how much migration reshapes the settlement pattern. Together these indices form a standard toolkit for describing and comparing migration systems across countries and over time. |
| ScholarGateConjunto de datos ↗ |
|
|