“…Such critiques, highlighting ‘the need for a more complete theory of migration that incorporates notions of cultural dynamics as they relate to behaviour and societal outcomes’ (Curran & Saguy, : 54), have been proactively received in the recent geographic literature, where various authors (e.g. Netto, ; Hickman et al ., ; Hickey, ; Hickman & Mai, ; Kohlbacher et al ., ; Neal et al ., ; Phillips & Robinson, ; Platts‐Fowler & Robinson, ) have begun to reconceptualise the linkages between migration and place. In doing so, their work has sought to move beyond primarily descriptive accounts of migrant integration ‘which say little about causal pathways between the nature of place and the process of migrant incorporation’ (Phillips & Robinson, : 415) towards more analytical examinations of the processes and feedbacks linking migration – and in particular that undertaken by younger people (Skelton & Gough, ) – to cultural change.…”