C M Law's research while affiliated with University of Salford and other places

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Publications (1)


The Elderly Population of Great Britain: Locational Trends and Policy Implications
  • Article

February 1984

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11 Reads

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66 Citations

Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers

A M Warnes

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C M Law

"The distribution in 1981 and trends during the 1970s of the pensionable age population, of those aged 75 years or more and of pensioners living alone in Great Britain are examined by counties, by county districts and at the intra-metropolitan scale. A pause in the tendency towards the spatial dissociation of the elderly from the remainder of the population is revealed. Many large retirement resorts now have declining elderly populations although rapid growth continues in their suburbs and adjacent rural areas. Rapid increases of the elderly population during the 1970s were seen in several inland rural areas and to a lesser extent in well established new towns and large city suburbs."

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Citations (1)


... In line with the attachment theory, empirical studies have evidenced that those born in rural areas return to their birthplace more frequently (Lundholm 2012). However, new generations tend to have fewer links to rural areas (Warnes and Law 1984). Thus, we expect that ties to the place of origin weakened over time. ...

Reference:

Coping with ageing: An historical longitudinal study of internal return migrations later in life in the Netherlands
The Elderly Population of Great Britain: Locational Trends and Policy Implications
  • Citing Article
  • February 1984

Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers