Answer :
Final answer:
The choice 'Families are more likely to cross international borders' is not among Ravenstein's Migration Laws. His laws include aspects like short-distance migration, young migrants, and economic drivers of migration, differing from recent trends of family migration.
Explanation:
The statement that is NOT among Ravenstein's Migration Laws is option D: 'Families are more likely to cross international borders.' Ernst Ravenstein's Laws of Migration include several generalizations about how and why people migrate. According to Ravenstein, most migrants move short distances (short-distance migration), and the majority of international migrants are young (young migrants) and tend to move to bigger cities (like rural to urban migration). Also, there is often a counter-flow, where some migrants move in the opposite direction, and economic factors are a significant driving force behind migration.
The increasing trend of family migration and the formation of migration chains observed more recently does not align directly with Ravenstein's original laws. Instead, these new patterns illustrate the evolving nature of migration.