body bg

Inform-Banner

'You don't want to be a check-out chick all your life': the out-migration of young people from Australia's small rural towns

  • Year: 2004
  • Author: Alston, Margaret
  • Journal Name: Australian Journal of Social Issues
  • Journal Number: Vol.39, No.3
  • Country: Australia

Globalisation and changes in agribulture have resulted in major social changes in inland Australia. Depopulation of the inland has led many to speculate on the future of rural towns and rural people. This paper will examine population drifts from country towns to cities and from the inland to the coastal regions and, in particular, the out-migration of young people. In doing this, the paper focuses on several small towns in central New South Wales that have been the subject of intensive study during 2000 and 2001. Drawing on analysis of Australian Bureau of Statistic figures, in-depth interviews and focus groups with key informants and surveys with young people and their parents in small rural communities the paper will report on the loss of young people and the greater loss of young women from these areas. It is argued that this outmigration of young people is linked to the need to seek higher education and also to the loss of full-time jobs for young people. The loss of these jobs is the result of changes in agricultural production, labour market restructuring and a withdrawal of public and private sector services.

Related Items

Impacts and outcomes of diabetes care in a high risk remote indigenous community over time: Implications for practice

The aim of this study was to determine diabetes care processes and intermediate clinical outcomes...

eWork in regional Australia

New information and communications technologies increasingly allow a wide range of business...

Broadband Adoption by Agriculture and Local Government Councils - Australia and the USA

The growing use of the Internet is providing rural, regional and remote areas with new...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us