Sticky places for regional immigrant settlement: A literature review

Author:

Bakshi Leena1ORCID,McKenzie Fiona Haslam2,Bolleter Julian3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography and Planning University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia Australia

2. Department of Geography, School of Social Sciences The University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia Australia

3. Australian Urban Design Research Centre The University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractSince 1996, migration‐related schemes have directed new immigrants, refugees and humanitarian entrants to regional Australia to mitigate the need for skills and declining population growth in these locations. However, a key concern of these schemes is the uncertainty of long‐term immigrant retention in regional locations beyond the stipulated visa category period. We draw on the metaphor of stickiness: the ability of geographic clusters to attract and retain to examine Australian regional settlement literature and identify factors and processes associated with immigrant settlement and retention. Through a systematic and rigorous review process, we identify seven interconnected factors and processes nestled amongst three core themes of sticky factors and processes that attract, enable and impede settlement and retention contributing to the growing knowledge regarding regional immigrant settlement and retention.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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