Migrations
Along with births and deaths, migration is one of the three demographic components of
population change, and it has often been described as the most difficult to measure, model and
forecast. Unlike fertility and mortality, migration is not a single unique event in time and space,
but can repeat itself over the lifetime of an individual. Thus, the volume and type of migration
measured and analyzed depend on the definitions used to identify a migrant. So, migration can
be defined as
“The movement of people across the specific boundary involving change of residence for a
substantial period of time”
The temporary movement of people for the purpose of travel, tourism, pilgrimages, or the
commute is not regarded as migration, in the absence of an intention to settle in the new
location.
Migration has continued under the form of both voluntary migration within one's region,
country, or beyond and involuntary migration which includes the slave trade etc. People who
migrate into a territory are called immigrants, while at the departure point they are called
emigrants. Refugee’s population is that part of population who are seeking shelter or refugee.
Classification of migration is not an easy task as there exists an extreme diversity of migration in
cause, duration, distance, direction, volume, velocity, selectivity and organization. There may
be of seasonal, temporary, periodic, permanent, spontaneous, forced, impelled, planned,
internal, external, inter-regional, international, continental or inter-continental type migration.
DIFFERENTIAL MIGRATION
Migrations are age and sex selective. The most accepted migration differential is certainly that
of age, as young adults migrate first to their jobs. Fortunately, they adjust more easily to their
new environment than do other age groups. Among young population, males migrate first than
females. On the other hand, married people migrate less as compared to unmarried people. In
Most developed Countries (MDCs) short distance internal migrants are pre-dominantly female