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Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants

Zimbabwean-born migrants form the largest proportion of the foreign-born population in South Africa; however, relatively little is known about both the international and internal migration behaviour of this population group. This study reviews several migration theories, and existing evidence on Zim...

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Main Author: Zhou, Siyanai
Other Authors: Moultrie, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Centre for Actuarial Research (CARE) 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Zhou, Siyanai
author2 Moultrie, Thomas
author_browse Moultrie, Thomas
Zhou, Siyanai
author_facet Moultrie, Thomas
Zhou, Siyanai
author_sort Zhou, Siyanai
collection Thesis
description Zimbabwean-born migrants form the largest proportion of the foreign-born population in South Africa; however, relatively little is known about both the international and internal migration behaviour of this population group. This study reviews several migration theories, and existing evidence on Zimbabwean-born migration to South Africa and uses the 2011 Census and 2016 Community Survey data for South Africa to explore both provincial and metropolitan migration patterns of Zimbabwean migrants. The study also seeks to identify characteristics of migrant internal movers and how these are associated with their propensity to migrate. To accomplish this, two modelling approaches are used, namely: the multiplicative component model (TODA) and the logistic regression model. The first modelling approach describes the origin-destination specific migration patterns of this group of migrants. The results from this analytic model show that Zimbabwean migrants are concentrated in three provinces, namely, Gauteng, Western Cape, and Limpopo; particularly in respective metropolitan areas. Also, post-arrival migration is largely focused on these major receiving provinces. The findings suggest that this pattern of concentration is likely to continue. The second modelling approach examines the inter-provincial migration of Zimbabwean migrants. At the aggregate level, the study results show a degree of selectivity of Zimbabwean immigration by factors such as age, sex, marital status, and education. Also, the results show that post-immigration migration is not necessarily significant to migrants’ redistribution. However, for those who move, the logistic regression analysis reveals that province of residence, age, marital status, and sex significantly impact on migrants’ propensity to move from “pioneer settlements” and their effects are consistent over time. Finally, despite concerns about the quality of the data collected in the 2011 census and 2016 Community Survey, our results show that there is general consistency of migration 'patterns’ between the two datasets.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:48:58.326Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Centre for Actuarial Research (CARE)
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29845 Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants Zhou, Siyanai Moultrie, Thomas Demography Zimbabwean-born migrants form the largest proportion of the foreign-born population in South Africa; however, relatively little is known about both the international and internal migration behaviour of this population group. This study reviews several migration theories, and existing evidence on Zimbabwean-born migration to South Africa and uses the 2011 Census and 2016 Community Survey data for South Africa to explore both provincial and metropolitan migration patterns of Zimbabwean migrants. The study also seeks to identify characteristics of migrant internal movers and how these are associated with their propensity to migrate. To accomplish this, two modelling approaches are used, namely: the multiplicative component model (TODA) and the logistic regression model. The first modelling approach describes the origin-destination specific migration patterns of this group of migrants. The results from this analytic model show that Zimbabwean migrants are concentrated in three provinces, namely, Gauteng, Western Cape, and Limpopo; particularly in respective metropolitan areas. Also, post-arrival migration is largely focused on these major receiving provinces. The findings suggest that this pattern of concentration is likely to continue. The second modelling approach examines the inter-provincial migration of Zimbabwean migrants. At the aggregate level, the study results show a degree of selectivity of Zimbabwean immigration by factors such as age, sex, marital status, and education. Also, the results show that post-immigration migration is not necessarily significant to migrants’ redistribution. However, for those who move, the logistic regression analysis reveals that province of residence, age, marital status, and sex significantly impact on migrants’ propensity to move from “pioneer settlements” and their effects are consistent over time. Finally, despite concerns about the quality of the data collected in the 2011 census and 2016 Community Survey, our results show that there is general consistency of migration 'patterns’ between the two datasets. 2019-03-01T06:36:24Z 2019-03-01T06:36:24Z 2018 2019-02-25T11:33:55Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29845 eng application/pdf Centre for Actuarial Research (CARE) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Demography
Zhou, Siyanai
Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants
title_full Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants
title_fullStr Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants
title_full_unstemmed Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants
title_short Ethnic migration patterns in South Africa: A case of Zimbabwean immigrants
title_sort ethnic migration patterns in south africa a case of zimbabwean immigrants
topic Demography
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29845
work_keys_str_mv AT zhousiyanai ethnicmigrationpatternsinsouthafricaacaseofzimbabweanimmigrants