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| Multiregional Migration Projection× | Rogers-Castro Migration Schedule× | |
|---|---|---|
| Nozare | Migration Studies | Migration Studies |
| Saime | Regression model | Regression model |
| Izcelsmes gads≠ | 1975 | 1981 |
| Autors≠ | Andrei Rogers; Frans Willekens | Andrei Rogers & Luis J. Castro |
| Tips≠ | Matrix cohort-component projection model for multiple interacting regions | Parametric curve-fitting model for age-specific migration rates |
| Pirmavots≠ | Rogers, A. (1975). Introduction to Multiregional Mathematical Demography. John Wiley & Sons, New York. ISBN: 9780471729945 | Rogers, A., & Castro, L. J. (1981). Model Migration Schedules. IIASA Research Report RR-81-30. link ↗ |
| Citi nosaukumi | Multiregional Cohort-Component Projection, Multistate Population Projection, Spatial Population Projection, Rogers Multiregional Projection | Model Migration Schedule, Rogers-Castro Curve, Multi-Exponential Migration Schedule, Age Profile of Migration |
| Saistītās | 3 | 3 |
| Kopsavilkums≠ | 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. | 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. |
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