Abstract

Changes in ethnic structure of population in the light of recent trends of migration and natural reproduction

Highlights

  • Introduction and theoretical backgroundSpatial redistribution of population has recently become the topic being increasingly addressed in geographic research in Central and Eastern European (CEE) post-socialist countries

  • The results indicates significant impact of natural reproduction behaviour differences between Slovak and Hungarian ethnics to the changes of ethnic structure of population but the impact of the migration is even stronger what corresponds with intensive decentralization of population by migration identified within the Košice functional urban regions (FURs)

  • Results obtained for the Bratislava FUR indicates dominant role of migration in the spatial redistribution of population which is manifested by very intensive decentralization of population within the region

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Summary

Introduction

Spatial redistribution of population (consisting of migration and natural reproduction) has recently become the topic being increasingly addressed in geographic research in Central and Eastern European (CEE) post-socialist countries. Natural reproduction and migration behaviours of population have been affected strongly by that transformation. This is reflected by many research papers published by scholars from post-socialist as well as capitalistic countries. Migration and natural reproduction of population are processes closely related to other characteristics of population. They are affected by factors such as age, sex, education, social status, ethnic or religious structure of population but in the same time migration and reproduction cause changes in these structures

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