Boom or bust? Population dynamics in natural resource-dependent counties
Publication Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
9-2011
Abstract
This chapter evaluates how migration streams by age, educational attainment, household income, and labor force status shape population composition and community assets in rural natural-resource-dependent US counties. Rural areas (and especially those dependent on natural resources) have long experienced out-migration of young adults, more educated people, and higher income households with serious implications for community sustainability. However, amenity destination places represent a different kind of natural resource dependence with correspondingly distinct migration patterns that have become more common around the world. In contrast to farming and mining dependent counties, counties dependent on serving as an amenity destination experience in-migration and attract high-income households, highly educated individuals, and older adults. Yet, we find that even amenity destinations experience net out-migration of young adults, remarkable levels of population turnover, and little gain in the employed population. These conditions could jeopardize the efficacy of local institutions (especially schools), curtail economic development, increase community ambivalence, and strain community services. In sum, migration flows in amenity destinations increase local financial capital but yield mixed outcomes for human and social capitals, bringing potential for community capital accumulation but introducing challenges as well.
Keywords
Social Capital, Financial Capital, Migration Flow, Bonding Social Capital, Labor Force Status
Discipline
Work, Economy and Organizations
Research Areas
Sociology
Publication
International Handbook of Rural Demography
Volume
3
Editor
Kulcsár, László J.; Curtis, Katherine J.
First Page
349
Last Page
367
ISBN
978-94-007-1841-8
Identifier
10.1007/978-94-007-1842-5_24
Publisher
Springer
City or Country
Dordrecht
Citation
1