Social Forces
Volume 66, Issue 2, 1987, Pages 427-445
Slums and Squatter Areas as Entrepots for Rural-Urban Migrants in a Less Developed Society (Article)
Costello M.A.*
-
a
Xavier University, Philippines
Abstract
Cities in the less-developed world are frequently characterized by high rates of inmigration, as coupled with a widespread proliferation of slum and squatter areas. As such, a number of observers have suggested that rural-to-urban migrants are disproportionately likely to settle in low-income neighborhoods immediately on their arrival in the city. This paper presents migration data from a Philippine city which do not support this generalization. Overall, migrants are neither heavily segregated in certain districts of the city nor particularly likely to settle in a slum community, with these findings persisting even when the sample was restricted to lower-status, rural-urban migrants. These patterns are chiefly attributable to heavy rates of inmigration among young unmarried persons (especially females), many of whom reside in nonslum neighborhoods as servants, lodgers, or extended relatives. © 1987 The University of North Carolina Press.
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0023460709&doi=10.1093%2fsf%2f66.2.427&partnerID=40&md5=b19e892ff786b8957e0c2ec54cbfde87
DOI: 10.1093/sf/66.2.427
ISSN: 00377732
Cited by: 9
Original Language: English