3. On the demand side of international labour mobility: The structure of the German labour market as a causal factor of seasonal Polish migration

2008 ◽  
pp. 37-64 ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfonso Arpaia ◽  
Aron Kiss ◽  
Balazs Palvolgyi ◽  
Alessandro Turrini
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 51 (6) ◽  
pp. 1217-1224
Author(s):  
Roger Beecham ◽  
Aidan Slingsby

We present a collection of small multiple graphics that support analysis and understanding of the geography of labour-market self-containment across London’s 33 boroughs. Ratios describing supply-side self-containment, the extent to which working residents access jobs locally, and demand-side self-containment, the extent to which local jobs are filled by local resident workers, are first calculated for professional and non-professional occupations and encoded directly through geographically-arranged bar charts. The full distribution of workers into-and out-of- boroughs that underpins these ratios is then revealed via Origin-Destination flows maps (OD maps) – sets of geographically-arranged choropleths. In order to make relative and absolute comparison of borough-to-borough frequencies between occupation types, these OD maps are coloured according to signed chi-square residuals: for every borough-to-borough pair, we compare the observed number of flows to access professional versus non-professional jobs against the number that would be expected given the distribution of those jobs across London boroughs. Our geographically-arranged small multiples demonstrate potential for spatial analysis: a rich, multivariate structure is depicted that reflects London’s economic geography and that would be difficult to expose using non-visual means.


2007 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 649-669 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANNE LISE ELLINGSÆTER ◽  
LARS GULBRANDSEN

AbstractIn most European countries a ‘childcare gap’ exists: that is, a discrepancy between the demand for and provision of childcare. Among the countries that are succeeding in closing the gap are the Nordic welfare states. Hence, knowledge abouthowchildcare provision in these countries has developed is of wide interest. This article stresses the importance of studying how the interactive processes of changing provision and demand explain the building up and the closing of national childcare gaps. Although there are similarities in the development of Nordic childcare services, some differences stand out. The comparison indicates that complex societal processes interact in shaping provision and demand. These dynamics are explored in more detail in the Norwegian case, where the interactive processes have produced an ever-increasing demand for childcare. The demand side is crucial, particularly the role of mothers in generating momentum for policy change. Mothers' changing labour market patterns and their demand for childcare are important driving forces for policy change.


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