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Exploring the use of mobile phone data for national migration statistics.

Exploring the use of mobile phone data for national migration statistics

Migration flow statistics typically remain constrained by the logistics of infrequent censuses or surveys. The penetration rate of mobile phones is now high across the globe with rapid recent increases in ownership in low-income countries. Analyzing the changing spatiotemporal distribution of mobile phone users through anonymized call detail records (CDRs) offers the possibility to measure migration at multiple temporal and spatial scales. Based on a dataset of 72 billion anonymized CDRs in Namibia from October 2010 to April 2014, this study explored how internal migration estimates can be derived and modelled from CDRs at subnational and annual scales, and how precision and accuracy of these estimates compare to census-derived migration statistics. The authors also demonstrate the use of CDRs to assess how migration patterns change over time, with a finer temporal resolution compared with censuses. The results highlight that estimates of migration flows made using mobile phone data is a promising avenue for complementing more traditional national migration statistics and obtaining more timely and local data.

Lien:

https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/429109/

Source/Editeur:

University of Southampton, UK

Author(s):

Lai Shengjie Zu Erbach-schoenberg Elisabeth DP Pezzulo Carla Ruktanonchai Nick Sorichetta Alessandro Steele Jessica Li Tracey Dooley Claire and Tatem Andrew

Date de publication:

Statut:

Free

Pays/région:

Namibia

Region:

Africa

La langue:

English

Mots clés:

Big data