Place, Migration, and Development in the Third World: An Alternative View : with Particular Reference to Population Movements, Labor Market Experiences and Regional Change in Latin America

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Routledge, 1991 - Business & Economics - 252 pages
Providing a fresh examination of the nature of Third World development, the author focuses on the characteristics of particular places and regions and their influences on behaviour. This is an important study of the relationship between population movements and regional and national changes.

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About the author (1991)

One of a group of geographers trained in quantitative methods in the 1960s, Lawrence A. Brown received his Ph.D. in 1965 from Northwestern University. Most of his career since then has been spent as professor at Ohio State University, which has one of the leading research and graduate programs in modern geography. Brown's early work focused on the dynamics of modern cities, and his research on intraurban migration remains among the most often cited in this broadly interdisciplinary subject. Throughout the 1970s his research focused more closely on the geographic spread of innovations. The last of the three books he produced based on this research, Innovation Diffusion: A New Perspective (1981), was particularly well received because it shifted attention from the demand for innovations to their supply. By the 1980s, Brown's work had extended to focus on the process of economic and demographic development, particularly as it relates to Latin America. He developed a paradigm for the interrelationships between migration and economic development. His current work is on the spatial aspects of settlement system evolution in Latin America.

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