Rural flight (or rural exodus) is the migratory patterns of peoples from rural areas into urban areas.
In modern times, it often occurs in a region following the industrialization of agriculture when fewer people are needed to bring the same amount of agricultural output to market and related agricultural services and industries are consolidated. Rural flight is exacerbated when the population decline leads to the loss of rural services such as stores and schools, which leads to greater loss of population as people leave to seek those features.
This phenomenon was first articulated through Ravenstein's Laws of migration in the 1880s, upon which modern theories are based.
Read more about Rural Flight: In The United States and Canada, Contemporary Developing Countries
Famous quotes containing the words rural and/or flight:
“Once wealth and beauty are gone, there is always rural life.”
—Mason Cooley (b. 1927)
“One mans observation is another mans closed book or flight of fancy.”
—Willard Van Orman Quine (b. 1908)