Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden

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Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden. / Hansen, Høgni Kalsø; Niedomysl, Thomas.

In: Journal of Economic Geography, Vol. 9/2, 2009, p. 191-206.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, HK & Niedomysl, T 2009, 'Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden', Journal of Economic Geography, vol. 9/2, pp. 191-206.

APA

Hansen, H. K., & Niedomysl, T. (2009). Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden. Journal of Economic Geography, 9/2, 191-206.

Vancouver

Hansen HK, Niedomysl T. Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden. Journal of Economic Geography. 2009;9/2:191-206.

Author

Hansen, Høgni Kalsø ; Niedomysl, Thomas. / Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden. In: Journal of Economic Geography. 2009 ; Vol. 9/2. pp. 191-206.

Bibtex

@article{06d50f6cc7614d65acdf38e717efd6c7,
title = "Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden",
abstract = "A central element in contemporary regional development strategies is the ability for regions to attract and retain talented people. The underlying argument is that by attracting talented people, regions are better geared to meet the demand of competences of the knowledge economy and become more competitive. This article focuses on the migration of the creative class in Sweden. Three questions, central to recent theoretical claims but until now overlooked, are addressed: (i) Do members of the creative class move more often compared to other migrant groups? (ii) Are they more selective in their destination choices, favouring regions with a favourable {\textquoteleft}people climate{\textquoteright}? (iii) Do their reasons for migration differ from those of other migrant groups? Employing unique Swedish survey and register data, the results show that the migration rates of the creative class are only marginally higher than for other groups. The results, moreover, show that most migration activities for the creative class take place just after finishing university and that the creative class people move for jobs rather than place. The presented empirical findings of the article do not support central theoretical arguments about the mobility of the creative class. In light of these findings, the article concludes with discussing why the creative class theory has become so influential despite the lack of empirical evidence",
author = "Hansen, {H{\o}gni Kals{\o}} and Thomas Niedomysl",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
volume = "9/2",
pages = "191--206",
journal = "Journal of Economic Geography",
issn = "1468-2702",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Migrations of the Creative Class: Evidence from Sweden

AU - Hansen, Høgni Kalsø

AU - Niedomysl, Thomas

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - A central element in contemporary regional development strategies is the ability for regions to attract and retain talented people. The underlying argument is that by attracting talented people, regions are better geared to meet the demand of competences of the knowledge economy and become more competitive. This article focuses on the migration of the creative class in Sweden. Three questions, central to recent theoretical claims but until now overlooked, are addressed: (i) Do members of the creative class move more often compared to other migrant groups? (ii) Are they more selective in their destination choices, favouring regions with a favourable ‘people climate’? (iii) Do their reasons for migration differ from those of other migrant groups? Employing unique Swedish survey and register data, the results show that the migration rates of the creative class are only marginally higher than for other groups. The results, moreover, show that most migration activities for the creative class take place just after finishing university and that the creative class people move for jobs rather than place. The presented empirical findings of the article do not support central theoretical arguments about the mobility of the creative class. In light of these findings, the article concludes with discussing why the creative class theory has become so influential despite the lack of empirical evidence

AB - A central element in contemporary regional development strategies is the ability for regions to attract and retain talented people. The underlying argument is that by attracting talented people, regions are better geared to meet the demand of competences of the knowledge economy and become more competitive. This article focuses on the migration of the creative class in Sweden. Three questions, central to recent theoretical claims but until now overlooked, are addressed: (i) Do members of the creative class move more often compared to other migrant groups? (ii) Are they more selective in their destination choices, favouring regions with a favourable ‘people climate’? (iii) Do their reasons for migration differ from those of other migrant groups? Employing unique Swedish survey and register data, the results show that the migration rates of the creative class are only marginally higher than for other groups. The results, moreover, show that most migration activities for the creative class take place just after finishing university and that the creative class people move for jobs rather than place. The presented empirical findings of the article do not support central theoretical arguments about the mobility of the creative class. In light of these findings, the article concludes with discussing why the creative class theory has become so influential despite the lack of empirical evidence

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9/2

SP - 191

EP - 206

JO - Journal of Economic Geography

JF - Journal of Economic Geography

SN - 1468-2702

ER -

ID: 33366066