POpulation and PLAces research group

The POPLA research group provides a focus for the strong tradition of population and demography-related research, teaching, consultancy and data support, within the CCSR and University of Manchester. The group's work is currently organised under the broad themes of 'Ethnic group, racial and cultural demography', 'Estimation and forecasting: methods', 'Estimation and forecasting: software', 'Developing countries' and 'Migration and health'. It includes work with more general applicability on social and geographical inequalities, and quantitative methods, for example linking closely with methodological work on combining and integrating data. This group is also heavily involved in development of the PopGroup software. Migration, race and population dynamics project.

The POPLA research group provides a focus for the strong tradition of population and demography-related research, teaching and consultancy at the University of Manchester.

Meetings are held regularly on the first Monday of every month. The meetings include discussions which cover a wide range of members' interests. Topics of discussions could be a particular paper or can be concerned with a member's own research. Members are able to obtain insight into their work by listening and discussing their work with other members. Anyone interested is welcome to attend. Notification of meetings, topics under discussion, time and place are circulated via email lists. Click here for details of future meetings and discussions. If you would like to be included in the POPLA group email list, send your request to join to susan.lomax@manchester.ac.uk

Those currently involved in the group, with links to their personal web pages, are Academic and Research Staff: Mark Brown, David Voas, Nissa Finney, Susan Lomax, Gemma Catney, Albert Sabater, Rob Ford and Vanessa Higgins; Research Students: Alan Marshall, Susan Ramsay, Nisha Kapoor, Nestor Arcia, Naomi Marquis, Stephen Jivraj, Julia Shepherd, Ewan Carr, Alfonso Echazarra and Ingrid Storm and Research Associates: Paul Voss.


Current POPLA Research

Research Themes

 

 

POPLA Graph of the Month

This graph shows the net migration rate in Neighbourhood Management Round 2 regeneration areas between 2003-04 and 2006-07 for school-aged pupils by free school meal eligibility.

Net migration rate in neighbourhood Management Round 2

Note: migration rates are expressed as a percentage of population in either base year 2003 or base year 2006 and net rate calculated by subtracting out-migration from in-migration. Base population: All school-aged pupils 24,318 (2003), 23,170 (2006); FSM 8,882 (2003), 8,044 (2006); Non-FSM 15,436 (2003), 15,126 (2006)


Source: Migration selectivity and area-based regeneration in England. More details available at: http://www.ccsr.ac.uk/publications/working/2008-22.pdf

 

The graph shows that the net change of school-aged pupils in Neighbourhood Management Pathfinder Round 2 regeneration areas was negative in a period before the programme commenced (2003-04) and in a period during which it was in operation (2006-07). More strikingly, the net out-migration rate in both periods was greater for school-aged pupils’ eligibility for free school meals than those pupils not eligible for free school meals. This suggests that migration has the effect of reducing the concentration of disadvantage in the Neighbourhood Management Pathfinder Round 2 areas, as a whole, which contradicts current thinking amongst many regeneration practitioners.

For further details visit: http://www.ccsr.ac.uk/publications/working/2008-22.html
Or contact Stephen Jivraj: stephen.jivraj@postgrad.manchester.ac.uk

 

POPLA Discussion Topics

Date Discussion
3 November 2008

Creating Shape files using ArcGIS by Susan Lomax

An overview which explains how basic shape files containing geographic data only i.e. that which draws geographic polygons into a recognisable country for mapping purposes can be joined to a file with data which requires mapping. An example is shown whereby the districts of England and Wales have been categorized into certain types and these need mapping.

15 December 2008 Gemma provided an outline of a paper which is part of her work on the Migration Race and Population Dynamics project working paper to appear January 09. Additional topics were Measuring Segregation workshop and Qualitative information on migrants.
2 February 2009 Stephen introduced a radio interview regarding Leicester as the first non-white majority city and other experiences of media reporting of research. To obtain information about the interview click to the BBC website here.
2 March 2009 Nissa Finney introduced the following presentation and discussion: "What are the implications of ethnic differences in transition to adulthood norms for migration and ethnic integration? Some new results from the SARS and CAMS"

 

Top of the page

Go to Graph of the Month

Go to Discussion Topic Details

 

NEXT MEETING TO BE HELD 6 APRIL 2009 IN G0.33 ARTHUR LEWIS BUILDING

Discussion Topic:

by Alan Marshall (subject to be confirmed)

Popla News and Events 2009

Tuesday 24th March 2009

Nick Bailey seminar on Factors accounting for neighbourhood change using the Scottish Longitudinal study, at 4pm in Arthur Lewis 2.16 Boardroom

Thursday 2nd April 2009

Conference on Migration, Community and Ethnicity, joint with the Study Group on Ethnicity, Religion and Migration. University of Manchester, free to attend. See http://www.ccsr.ac.uk/erm/ for further information and booking.

Monday 6th April 2009

POPLA meeting followed by discussion led by Alan Marshall.

Wednesday 6th May 2009
Royal Statistical Society Leeds/Bradford Local Group, Statistics and migration http://www.maths.leeds.ac.uk/statistics
/rss/archive/previous_2009.html#CRIME

 

Wednesday 13th May 2009 to Thursday

14th May 2009

Remaking migration theory: intersections and cross-fertilisation. A two-day international conference of the Population Geography Research Group of the RGS-IBG. Jointly hosted by the University of Brighton and University of Sussex

 

Friday 26th June 2009

PhD conference: European Minorities in Cross-Disciplinary Perspective, 26th June 2009, Council Chamber, Whitworth Building. http://www.socialsciences.manchester.ac.uk /jeanmonnet/em.htm

 

September 2009

POPLA Study Week.


Now available! 'Sleepwalking to segregation'? Chellenging myths about race and migration by Nissa Finney and Ludi Simpson (Policy Press)

 

 

Current Work of POPLA Members

 

"Unmet need for Childbearing? Low ertility in Poland"

Research project by Joanna Rozanska. Now in a research post in Brussels. Click here to view her poster...

 

Population resources for mid-1991 and mid-2001, all by 2001 geography

 

Census outputs have been enhanced to make allowances for undercount, for student term-time address and for boundary changes during the decade, so that population change during that decade can be properly assessed

 

Click here for more details....

 

 

POPLA Past News and Events

 

Wednesday 25th February 2009

Seminar discussion led by Dr Kirk Harland (University of Leeds), co-hosted with the Spatial Estimation and Analysis group. "Commuting to School: A New Spatial Interaction Modelling Framework". 2-4pm, HBS room 1.70.

 

Buxton Study Week, 2008

View photos from the study week here.

 

BSPS Annual Conference 2008

Gemma and Ludi organised a special session on ‘Migration biographies’ at the Annual Conference of the British Society for Population Studies, in Manchester, September 2008. Abstract and presentation.

 

PopFest 2008

 

PopFest 2008 was held in Manchester! PhD students from the POPLA research group organized PopFest 2008. PopFest 2007 was held in Southampton.

 

 

POPLA Seminar 2008

Professor Sako Musterd (University of Amsterdam)

 

Segregation, Integration and Neighbourhood Effects: Debates and Analyses

 

Took place on June 3rd 2008.

Abstract available here

Presentation slides available here

 

Joanna Rozanska at I.N.E.D, Paris

 

POPLA doctoral student Joanna Rozanska, is spending 2007-08 studying at I.N.E.D in Paris (Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques). Her specialism is fertility in Poland.

 

Bonscale Study Week 2007

Bonscale Study Week 14 - 20 October 2007

Grubs up at Bonscale

 

 

The POPLA Conference 2007

This took place in May 2007 was a complete success! Go to the event website to download presentations and notes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consultancy

We welcome enquiries for consultancies and many of our research themes have been supported by local and central government and other clients.

Contact kingsley.purdam@manchester.ac.uk for CCSR consultancy advice.

 

Training and qualifications:

  • CCSR’s masters course in Social Research Methods and Statistics contains a strong element of demography.
  • CCSR offers PhD supervision, with some financial support for eligible students. PhD students are actively involved in POPLA, PhD research topics in demography are encouraged.
  • CCSR short courses include demographic concepts, estimates and projections, and are regularly used by local authority and other public sector services.

 

 

University of Manchester CCSR