Abstract

At a time when the future of the traditional population census in the United Kingdom is uncertain, increasing attention is being paid to the availability of data on geo-social processes, such as population migration, from alternative and less familiar administrative and survey sources. In this paper, we report on research using data which provides some valuable information about migration behaviour in connection with other demographic and lifestyle characteristics obtained from several large geo-referenced cross-sectional annual sample surveys of the British population originating from the commercial sector. In particular, the paper uses a method of sample weighting to compensate for potential biases related to unequal probabilities of selection. The findings suggest, however, that the unweighted commercial microdata can be used in migration modelling to give reassuringly reliable estimates of associational patterns of key demographic, socio-economic and behavioural/lifestyle characteristics.

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