972
Views
5
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Counter-urbanisation in pre-pandemic times: disentangling the influences of amenity and disamenity

ORCID Icon &

References

  • Argent, N., P. Smailes, and T. Griffin. 2007. “The Amenity Complex: Towards a Framework for Analysing and Predicting the Emergence of a Multifunctional Countryside in Australia.” Geographical Research 45: 217–232.
  • Argent, N., M. R. Tonts, J. Jones. 2011. “Amenity-led Migration in Rural Australia: A New Driver of Local Demographic and Environmental Change?.” In Demographic Change in Australia's Rural Landscapes: Implications for Society and the Environment, edited by G. Luck, D. Race and R. Black, 23–44. Dordrecht: Springer.
  • Argent, N., M. Tonts, R. Jones, and J. Holmes. 2014. “The Amenity Principle, Internal Migration and Rural Development in Australia.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 104: 305–318.
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2021a. Regional Internal Migration Estimates, Provisional, ABS Cat. No. 3412.0.55.005. https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/population/regional-internal-migration-estimates-provisional/latest-release.
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2021b. Age x Sex for Select New South Wales Local Government Areas, 2016 Census, Census Tablebuilder. Accessed July 15, 2021.
  • Barcus, H., and K. Halfacree. 2018. An Introduction to Population Geographies: Lives Across Space. London: Routledge.
  • Bell, M. 1995. Internal Migration in Australia, 1986–1991: Overview Report. Canberra: AGPS.
  • Bell, M., and G. Hugo. 2000. Internal Migration in Australia 1991-1996: Overview and the Overseas-Born. Canberra: Joint Commonwealth, State, Territory Population, Migration and Multicultural Research Program.
  • Bernard, A., E. Charles-Edwards, M. Alvarez, P. Wohland, J. Loginova, and S. Kalemba. 2020. Anticipating the Impact of COVID-19 on Internal Migration. Canberra: Centre for Population Research Paper, The Australian Government.
  • Burnley, I. 1996. “Associations Between Overseas, Intra-Urban and Internal Migration Dynamics in Sydney, 1976-91.” Journal of the Australian Population Association 13: 47–66.
  • Burnley, I., and P. Murphy. 1994. Immigration, Housing Costs and Population Dynamics in Sydney. Canberra: AGPS.
  • Burnley, I., and P. Murphy. 2002. “Change, Continuity or Cycles: The Population Turnaround in New South Wales.” Journal of Population Research 19: 137–154.
  • Burnley, I., and P. Murphy. 2004. Sea Change: Movement from Metropolitan to Arcadian Australia. Sydney: UNSW Press.
  • Burrough, P., and R. McDonnell. 1998. Principles of Geographical Information Systems. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Castles, S., and M. Miller. 2003. The age of Migration. New York: Guildford Press.
  • Cloke, P., and N. Thrift. 1987. “Intra-class Conflict in Rural Areas.” Journal of Rural Studies 3: 321–333.
  • Cloke, P., and N. Thrift. 1990. “Class Change and Conflict in Rural Areas.” In Rural Restructuring, edited by T. Marsden, P. Lowe, and S. Whatmore, 165–181. London: David Fulton.
  • Curry, G., G. Koczberski, and J. Selwood. 2001. “Cashing in, Cashing out: Rural Change on the South Coast of Western Australia.” Australian Geographer 32: 109–124.
  • Deller, S., S. Tsai, D. Marcouller, and D. English. 2001. “The Role of Amenities and Quality of Life in Rural Economic Growth.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 83: 352–365.
  • Department of Health and Aged Care and the National Key Centre for Social Applications of Geographical Information Systems (GISCA). 1999. Measuring Remoteness: Accessibility/Remoteness Index of Australia (ARIA), Occasional Papers: New Series No. 6. Canberra: Department of Health and Aged Care.
  • Fagan, R., and M. Webber. 1999. Global Restructuring: The Australian Experience. 2nd ed. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Fielding, A. 1998. “Counterurbanisation and Social Class.” In Migration Into Rural Areas: Theories and Issues, edited by P. Boyle, and K. Halfacree, 41–60. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons.
  • Forster, C. 1995. Australian Cities: Continuity and Change. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
  • Forster, C. 2006. “The Challenge of Change: Australian Cities and Urban Planning in the new Millennium.” Geographical Research 44: 173–182.
  • Frey, W. 1995. “Immigration and Internal Migration ‘Flight’: A California Case Study.” Population and Environment 16: 353–375.
  • Gkartzios, M. 2013. “‘Leaving Athens’: Narratives of Counterurbanisation in Times of Crisis.” Journal of Rural Studies 32: 158–167.
  • Haartsen, T., and F. Thissen. 2014. “The Success–Failure Dichotomy Revisited: Young Adults’ Motives to Return to Their Rural Home Region.” Children's Geographies 12: 87–101.
  • Hefford, R. 1985. Farm Policy in Australia. St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press.
  • Holmes, J. 2006. “Impulses Towards a Multifunctional Transition in Rural Australia: Gaps in the Research Agenda.” Journal of Rural Studies 22: 142–160.
  • Holmes, J., and N. Argent. 2016. “Rural Transitions in the Nambucca Valley: Socio-Demographic Change in a Disadvantaged Rural Locale.” Journal of Rural Studies 48: 129–142.
  • Hugo, G. 1996. “Counterurbanisation.” In Population Shift: Mobility and Change in Australia, edited by M. Bell, and P. Newton, 126–146. Canberra: AGPS.
  • Hugo, G. 2003. “Changing Patterns of Population Distribution.” In The Transformation of Australia’s Population, 197-2030, edited by S.-E. Khoo, and P. McDonald, 185–218. Sydney: UNSW.
  • Hugo, G. 2006. “Immigration Responses to Global Change in Asia: A Review.” Geographical Research 44: 155–172.
  • Hugo, G. 2008. “Immigrant Settlement Outside of Australia’s Capital Cities.” Population, Space and Place 14: 553–571.
  • Hugo, G., and M. Bell. 1998. “The Hypothesis of Welfare-led Migration to Rural Areas: The Australian Case.” In Migration Into Rural Areas: Theories and Issues, edited by P. Boyle, and K. Halfacree, 107–133. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons.
  • Hugo, G., and P. Smailes. 1985. “Urban-rural Migration in Australia: A Process View of the Turnaround.” Journal of Rural Studies 1: 11–30.
  • Hunter, L., J. Boardman, and J. Saint Onge. 2004. “The Association Between Natural Amenities, Rural Population Growth and Long-term Residents’ Economic Well-being”. Working Paper EB 2004-0005. Boulder: Institute of Behavioural Science, University of Colorado.
  • Laoire, N. 2007. “The ‘Green Green Grass of Home’? Return Migration to Rural Ireland.” Journal of Rural Studies 23: 332–344.
  • Loeffler, R., and E. Steinicke. 2007. “Amenity Migration in the US Sierra Nevada.” Geographical Review 97: 67–88.
  • McGranahan, D. 1999. “Natural Amenities Drive Rural Population Change”. Agricultural Economic Report No. 781. Washington: Food and Rural Economics Division, Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
  • McGuirk, P., and N. Argent. 2011. “Population Growth and Change: Implications for Australia’s Cities and Regions.” Geographical Research 49: 317–335.
  • Phillips, M. 2002. “The Production, Symbolization and Socialization of Gentrification: Impressions from two Berkshire Villages.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 27: 282–308.
  • Phillips, M. 2010. “Counterurbanisation and Rural Gentrification: An Exploration of the Terms.” Population, Space and Place 16: 539–558.
  • Ragusa, A. 2011. “Seeking Trees or Escaping Traffic? Socio-Cultural Factors and ‘Tree Change’ Migration in Australia.” In Demographic Change in Australia’s Rural Landscapes: Implications for Society and Environment, edited by G. Luck, D. Race, and R. Black, 71–100. Dordrecht: Springer.
  • Randolph, B. 2006. “Delivering the Compact City in Australia.” Urban Policy and Research 24: 473–490.
  • Regional Australia Institute. 2021. “Regional lifestyle continues to appeal.” Media Release, September 17.
  • Rich, D. 1987. The Industrial Geography of Australia. London: Croom Helm.
  • Ruming, K. 2014. “Urban Consolidation, Strategic Planning and Community Opposition in Sydney, Australia: Unpacking Policy Knowledge and Public Perceptions.” Land Use Policy 39: 254–265.
  • Scott, M., E. Murphy, and M. Gkartzios. 2017. “Placing ‘Home’ and ‘Family’ in Rural Residential Mobilities.” Sociologia Ruralis 57: 598–621.
  • Selwood, J., G. Curry, and R. Jones. 1996. “From the Turnaround to the Backlash: Tourism and Rural Change in the Shire of Denmark, Western Australia.” Urban Policy and Research 14: 215–225.
  • Smith, D. 2002. “Extending the Temporal and Spatial Limits of Gentrification.” International Journal of Population Geography 8: 385–394.
  • Stockdale, A., and G. Catney. 2014. “A Lifecourse Perspective on Urban-Rural Migration: The Importance of the Local Context.” Population, Space and Place 20: 83–98.
  • Urry, J. 2007. Mobilities. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Verrender, I. 2021. “Coronavirus Escapees from Big Cities are Driving a Regional Property Property Boom. Can it Last?”, ABC News Online. Accessed November 23, 2021. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-06-28/can-regional-property-boom-continue-or-be-a-bust/100248228.
  • Walmsley, D., R. Epps, and C. Duncan. 1998. “Migration to the New South Wales North Coast 1986-1991: Lifestyle Motiovated Counterurbanisation.” Geoforum 29: 105–118.
  • Wilson, G. 2001. “From Productivism to Post-Productivism and Back Again: Exploring the (Un)Changed Natural and Mental Landscapes of European Agriculture.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 26: 77–102.
  • Wilson, G. 2009. “The Spatiality of Multifunctional Agriculture: A Human Geography Perspective.” Geoforum 40: 269–280.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.