Intervening Opportunities Model
The intervening opportunities model, introduced by Samuel Stouffer in 1940, explains the volume of migration between two places not by the physical distance separating them but by the number of opportunities available at the destination relative to the opportunities a migrant would encounter along the way. Its central claim is provocative: there is no necessary relationship between mobility and distance. Distance only matters because crossing more of it usually means passing more chances to stop. Formally, the number of people moving a given distance is directly proportional to the number of opportunities at that distance and inversely proportional to the number of intervening opportunities. Stouffer revised the model in 1960 to add 'competing migrants' — rivals converging on the same destination from other origins — giving spatial-interaction analysis an alternative to the gravity model that is grounded in opportunity structure rather than mass and distance.
阅读完整方法
使用免费账户登录即可阅读本节。
方法图谱
相关方法的邻域——选择一个节点以展开探索。
来源
- Stouffer, S. A. (1940). Intervening Opportunities: A Theory Relating Mobility and Distance. American Sociological Review, 5(6), 845-867. DOI: 10.2307/2084520 ↗
- Stouffer, S. A. (1960). Intervening Opportunities and Competing Migrants. Journal of Regional Science, 2(1), 1-26. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9787.1960.tb00832.x ↗
如何引用本页
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Stouffer's Intervening Opportunities Model of Migration. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/zh/migration-studies/intervening-opportunities-model
选用哪种方法?
将本方法与其最相近的同类并置,并排研读——本馆将书籍铺陈于案上,取舍则由您定夺。
- Gravity Model of MigrationHuman Geography↔ 比较
- Place-to-Place Migration ModelMigration Studies↔ 比较
- Push-Pull Factor AnalysisMigration Studies↔ 比较