Rural Labor Flows in China
- Research Papers and Policy Studies
About the Author
Yaohui Zhao is professor of economics at the China Center for Economic Research of Peking University. Education: B.A. Peking University, M.A. Peking University, Ph.D. University of Chicago
Table of Contents
Foreword
Stephen J. McGurk
Introduction
Loraine A. West
1. Rural-to-Urban Labor Migration in China: The Past and the Present
Yaohui Zhao
2. Agricultural Labor and Rural Population Mobility: Some Observations
Hein Mallee
3. Rural Labor Migration in Contemporary China·. An Analysis of Its Features and the Macro Context
Ying Du
4. Diversification of Household Production in Rural China: Determinants and Outcomes
Lina Song
5. The Effect of Labor Migration on Agriculture: An Empirical Study
Nansheng Bai
6. Labor Migration as a Rural Development Strategy: A View from the Migration Origin
Denise Hare and Shukai Zhao
7. Chinese Labor Migration: Insights from Mexican Undocumented Migration to the United States
Kenneth D. Roberts
8. Organizational Characteristics of Rural Labor Mobility in China
Zhao Shukai
9. Regional Wage Gap, Information Flow, and Rural-Urban Migration
Xin Meng
10. Migrants and the Media: Concerns about Rural Migration in the Chinese Press
Delia Davin
11. The Relationship between Foreign Enterprises, Local Governments, and Women Migrant Workers in the Pearl River Delta
Shen Tan
12. "Insider" and "Outsider" Community Strategies toward Migrant Workers
Xiaodong Ma
Contributors
Reviews
"Although books and articles on internal migration in China have proliferated recently, this volume provides an exceptionally fine collection of essays that contain information and data useful for historical and comparative analyses in future case studies. Rural Labor Flows in China is strongly recommended for graduate students, researchers, and policy makers interested in labor issues in China." —Young-Jin Choi, PhD Candidate at the University of Hawai'i, China Review International 8, no. 2 (Fall 2001): 578-580
“The most significant aspect of this book is that it offers intensive empirical data collected from both origin and destination places of migrants at macro and micro contexts […] Another strength is that this volume affords some penetrating views that most former research on Chinese internal migration has ignored.” —Feng Zhang, University of British Columbia, Pacific Affairs 74, no. 3 (Autumn 2001): 420-422
