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Título
Living La Vida Global: The Expansion of Highly Qualified Migration to Spain and Its Socio‐Spatial Patterns
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Highly qualified immigrants
Multilevel latent class analysis
Residential distribution
Urban areas
Clasificación UNESCO
63 Sociología
Fecha de publicación
2026-02-05
Editor
Wiley
Citación
García Gómez, J. y López Gay, A. (2026). Living La Vida Global: The Expansion of Highly Qualified Migration to Spain and Its Socio‐Spatial Patterns. Population, Space and Place, 32(2). https://doi.org/10.1002/psp.70214
Resumen
[EN]High-income countries shape their migration policies to attract highly qualified immigrants (HQI), aiming to boost human capital and economic growth. HQI often settle in large cities, raising two challenges for urban social sustainability. First, immigrants frequently face residential segregation, hindering social integration. Second, local communities in cities receiving wealthier migrants may experience displacement due to lifestyle migration and transnational gentrification. However, in countries with recent migration history, the residential distribution of HQI in urban areas remains largely unknown. This study analyses the residential distribution of HQI in Spain's largest urban areas, where HQI have rapidly increased from nearly 170,000 in 2001 to over 925,000 in 2021. Using 2021 Census data, we apply Multilevel Latent Class Analysis to categorize immigrants by migration status, labour performance and household characteristics. We identify seven distinct groups and demonstrate the existence of a socioeconomic stratification regarding their residential distribution. Unemployed or overqualified HQIs from low- and middle-income regions cluster in lower-income peripheral areas, while those employed in high-skilled jobs originating in Europe concentrate in central cities.
Descripción
This research was supported by the Social Observatory of ‘la Caixa’ (project Cities in Movement: Socio‐Spatial Reconfiguration in the Post‐ Pandemic Era, LCF/PR/SR21/52560007, led by Antonio López‐Gay) and by the Next Generation EU initiative (Investigo Programme, which funded Jesús García‐Gómez's postdoctoral position).
URI
ISSN
1544-8444
DOI
10.1002/psp.70214
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