Aree JampaklayKim KorinekBarbara EntwisleMahidol UniversityUniversity of UtahThe University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill2018-08-242018-08-242007-01-01Asian and Pacific Migration Journal. Vol.16, No.4 (2007), 485-510011719682-s2.0-40449119409https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/25142© 2007 Scalabrini Migration Center. This study examines the residential patterns of rural-urban migrants in Thailand. The analysis takes advantage of a rich dataset that followed migrants from rural Nang Rong, a district in the Isan region, to the Bangkok metropolitan area and the Eastern Seaboard. Findings document substantial residential clustering: almost half of the migrants interviewed in 2000 and 2001 lived in neighborhoods where 80 percent or more of their neighbors came from Isan. Migrants with less than a secondary education, those working in factory jobs, and those working with other migrants from Isan were more likely to be living in Isan-concentrated neighborhoods, net of other variables.Mahidol UniversitySocial SciencesResidential clustering among Nang Rong migrants in urban settings of ThailandArticleSCOPUS10.1177/011719680701600403