body bg

Inform-Banner

The Amenity Principle, Internal Migration, and Rural Development in Australia

  • Year: 2014
  • Author: Neil Argent, Matthew Tonts, Roy Jones & John Holmes
  • Journal Name: Annals of the Association of American Geographers
  • Country: Australia

Arguably, rural land markets inAustralia are currently in a high state of flux, with a panoply of competing interests seeking to capitalize on both the traditional and a range of newly emergent values anchored in land. Amenity-led migration is, we argue, an important strand of this renewed interest in rural lands, albeit one that is highly spatially selective. Employing a predictive and synoptic model of migration attractiveness across southeastern and southwestern Australia, we test its associations with migration currents into and out of rural communities for the 1990s and 2000s. This article finds that communities with high relative accessibility—to metropolitan and urban centers and the coast—and an established or emerging tourism industry have been most likely to experience net migration gains. Yet amenity migration also intersects with more traditional rural land uses and, in particular, irrigated agriculture. Farming, and the biophysical environment and cultural landscape it both draws on and produces, is an important attractor of amenity migration.

Related Items

Building Stronger Regional Communities: Budget Outcomes 2014–15

Building Stronger Regional Communities: Budget Outcomes 2014–15 highlights key Australian...

Progress in Australian Regions: Yearbook 2014

Australia is made up of diverse regions, from busy interconnected urban areas to isolated remote...

Population by age and sex, regions of Australia, 2014

Contains latest available estimates by age and sex of the resident populations of areas of...

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