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Measuring migration motives with open-ended survey data: Methodological and conceptual issues.

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Studying migration motives is challenging. This research identifies methodological and conceptual pitfalls in open-ended survey data, offering solutions for future migration studies.

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Area of Science:

  • Sociology
  • Demography
  • Migration Studies

Background:

  • Measuring migration motives presents significant challenges.
  • Open-ended data collection offers potential but contains inherent pitfalls.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To identify methodological and conceptual issues in collecting data on migration motives.
  • To provide suggestions for improving future migration motive research.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of the
  • Motives for Migration
  • survey data on internal migration in Sweden.
  • Identification of recurring methodological and conceptual problems in respondent data.

Main Results:

  • Five categories of methodological issues were identified: handling multiple motives, motive attribution (self vs. household), motive type (status vs. event), third-party reference, and geographical unit.
  • Two conceptual issues were highlighted: distinguishing reasons for moving from location choice, and differentiating between moving 'from' and moving 'to'.

Conclusions:

  • Open-ended migration motive surveys require careful design to avoid methodological and conceptual ambiguities.
  • The findings offer valuable insights for future research on internal migration, immigration, and other life-course transitions.