Sowl Stephanie, Smith Rachel A, Brown Michael G
Iowa State University.
Rural Sociol. 2022 Mar;87(1):303-329. doi: 10.1111/ruso.12416. Epub 2021 Oct 20.
Many rural communities throughout the United States have experienced brain drain, or the out-migration of educated young people. Explanations for why college-educated adults leave rural communities have relied on economic rationales; however, the effects of social identities, community context, and place attachment have also been shown to influence migration decisions. Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), this study examines factors experienced during adolescence as well as postsecondary characteristics that promote college graduates' return to their rural communities when they are between the ages of 34 and 43. We find that among college graduates who had attended a rural public K-12 school, those who had higher levels of school attachment were significantly more likely to return home compared to graduates who had lower levels of school attachment. The findings also suggest that graduates who came from a lower college-educated community were more likely to return home than those from average or highly college-educated communities. By analyzing long-term outcomes, this study extends our understanding of the strengths of adolescent experiences and neighborhood context influencing the pull to return home and the support for policies strengthening rural communities as there may be long-term effects to returning home, even if youth leave for college.
美国各地的许多农村社区都经历了人才外流,即受过教育的年轻人向外迁移。对于受过大学教育的成年人离开农村社区的原因解释一直依赖于经济原理;然而,社会身份、社区环境和地方依恋的影响也已被证明会影响迁移决策。本研究利用青少年到成人健康全国纵向研究(Add Health)的数据,考察了青少年时期经历的因素以及高等教育阶段的特征,这些因素促使大学毕业生在34至43岁时回到他们的农村社区。我们发现,在曾就读于农村公立K-12学校的大学毕业生中,与学校依恋程度较低的毕业生相比,学校依恋程度较高的毕业生回家的可能性显著更高。研究结果还表明,来自大学教育程度较低社区的毕业生比来自大学教育程度一般或较高社区的毕业生更有可能回家。通过分析长期结果,本研究扩展了我们对青少年经历和邻里环境的优势的理解,这些优势影响着回家的吸引力以及对加强农村社区政策的支持,因为即使年轻人离开农村去上大学,回家可能也会有长期影响。