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El. knyga: Population, Place, and Spatial Interaction: Essays in Honor of David Plane

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This volume is devoted to the geographical—or spatial—aspects of population research in regional science, spanning spatial demographic methods for population composition and migration to studies of internal and international migration to investigations of the role of population in related fields such as climate change and economic growth. If spatial aspects of economic growth and development are the flagship of the regional science discipline, population research is the anchor. People migrate, consume, produce, and demand services. People are the source and beneficiaries of national, regional, and local growth and development. Since the origins of regional science, demographic research has been at the core of the discipline. Contributions in this volume are both retrospective and prospective, offering in their ensemble an authoritative overview of demographic research within the field of regional science. 
1 I Dream of Gini: Measures of Population Concentration and Their Application to US Population Distribution
1(18)
Peter A. Rogerson
2 Unraveling David Plane's Tools for Analyzing the Income Impacts of Interregional Migration Flows
19(16)
Jacques Ledent
3 A Short Exercise to Assess the Effects of Temporal and Spatial Aggregation on the Amounts of Spatial Spillovers
35(22)
Sungyup Chung
Geoffrey J. D. Hewings
4 Population Characterization in Location Modeling: Alternatives, Impacts, and Insights
57(16)
Daoqin Tong
Wangshu Mu
Changfeng Li
5 Interpreting the Geography of Human Capital Stock Variations
73(22)
Rachel S. Franklin
6 Population and Employment Change in US Metropolitan Areas
95(20)
Gordon F. Mulligan
Helena A. K. Nilsson
John I. Carruthers
7 Confronting Statistical Uncertainty in Rural America: Toward More Certain Data-Driven Policymaking Using American Community Survey (ACS) Data
115(20)
Jason R. Jurjevich
8 Unpacking the Nature of Long-Term Residential Stability
135(22)
William A. V. Clark
William Lisowski
9 Short-Term Relocation Versus Long-Term Migration: Measuring Income Transfers by Inter-provincial Employees Across Canadian Provinces
157(14)
K. Bruce Newbold
10 Age Articulation of Australia's International Migration Flows
171(30)
James Raymer
Nan Liu
Xujing Bai
11 Modelling Inter-urban Migration in an Open Population Setting: The Case of New Zealand
201(24)
Omoniyi B. Alimi
David C. Mare
Jacques Poot
12 Baby Boomers' Paths into Retirement
225(24)
Ayoung Kim
Brigitte S. Waldorf
13 The Demography of Water Use: Why the Past Is a Poor Predictor of the Future
249(12)
Patricia Gober
14 Mapping the Impact of Collaborative Research with David Plane
261
Beth Mitchneck
Rachel S. Franklin, Newcastle University.