Cornwall is arguably the poorest county in England, but since the 1960s it has been the
recipient of some of the highest levels of in-migration. The result of this has seen Cornwall
experience some of fastest rates of population growth. This has taken place in the context of
counterurbanisation, a process that has been argued to be economically beneficial.
Cornwall therefore seems to provide two paradoxical conditions; first, comparative
economic poverty has not deterred large numbers of people wishing to live in the county
and second, sustained population growth seems to have failed to lift Cornwall from
economic poverty.
This thesis is an empirical piece of research that analyses the underlying processes of in-migration
in Cornwall. This explores the characteristics of in-migrants drawing
predominantly on secondary data from the ONS Longitudinal Study and the Census. It also
considers a range of additional sources of socio-economic data to contextualise Cornwall's
in-migration.
By comparing the processes of in-migration in Cornwall with other areas it is clear that
environmental reasons underpin the strategies of many in-migrants and they are often
characterised by low levels of economic dynamism. However the analyses also examine in-migrants
at a number of spatial scales and this reveals a high level of heterogeneity of
migrant flows within the county.
The findings of the thesis serve to highlight some of the complexities and
multidimensionality of counterurbanisation particularly in regard to how causal processes
may be spatially and temporally variable and how the effects may be unequally distributed
across time, space and for different sub-groups.
Date of Award | 2007 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Migration & Economy in Cornwall
Burley, S. J. (Author). 2007
Student thesis: PhD