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Spatial Mobility of Migrant Workers in Beijing, China

Autor Ran Liu
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 apr 2015
The great migration of farmers leaving rural China to work and live in big cities as 'floaters' has been an on-going debate in China for the past three decades. This book probes into the spatial mobility of migrant workers in Beijing, and questions the city 'rights' issues beneath the city-making movement in contemporary China. In revealing and explaining the socio-spatial injustice, this volume re-theorizes the 'right to the city' in the Chinese context since Deng Xiaoping's reforms. The policy review, census analysis, and housing survey are conducted to examine the fate of migrant workers, who being the most marginalized group have to move persistently as the city expands and modernizes itself. The study also compares the migrant workers with local Pekinese dislocated by inner city renewals and city expansion activities. Rapid urban growth and land expropriation of peripheral farmlands have also created a by-product of urbanization, an informal property development by local farmers in response to rising low-cost rental housing demand. This is a highly comparable phenomenon with cities in other newly industrialized countries, such as São Paulo. Readers will be provided with a good basis in understanding the interplay as well as conflicts between migrant workers' housing rights and China's globalizing and branding pursuits of its capital city.

Audience:

This book will be of great interest to researchers and policy makers in housing planning, governance towards urban informalities, rights to the city, migrant control and management, and housing-related conflict resolutions in China today.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783319147376
ISBN-10: 3319147374
Pagini: 303
Ilustrații: XIX, 303 p. 59 illus., 22 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.63 kg
Ediția:2015
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Public țintă

Research

Cuprins

China’s globalizing primary cities as a contested space: an introduction.- Contentions arising between city imaging pursuits and displacees.- Displacee groups in Beijing: differentiated citizenship & access to space.- Cities with or without slums? A contrast of city models in São Paulo & Beijing.- Conclusion: exigencies produced by the Lefebvrian notion of ‘Right to the City’.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

The great migration of farmers leaving rural China to work and live in big cities as ‘floaters’ has been an on-going debate in China for the past three decades. This book probes into the spatial mobility of migrant workers in Beijing, China, and questions the city ‘rights’ issues beneath the city-making movement in contemporary China. In revealing and explaining the socio-spatial injustice phenomenon, this volume re-theorizes the ‘right to the city’ in the Chinese context since Deng Xiaoping’s reforms. The policy review, census analysis, and housing survey are conducted to examine the housing rights of migrant workers, who are the least protected and most marginalized displacee groups in Beijing. The comparable studies serve to distinguish the displaced migrants from local displacee groups, and Beijing Municipality’s style of governance towards its urban informalities from that in other Third World cities like São Paulo. The reader will gain a better understanding of migrant workers’ housing rights in China’s globalizing and branding primary cities.
 
Audience:
This book will be of great interest to researchers and policy makers in housing supplies, governance towards urban informalities, human rights and migration control, and housing-related social discontent issues in China today.

Caracteristici

Highlights the migrant workers’ housing rights in China’s primary cities and includes also cases studies from Latin America and India Written from a human-rights-orientated perspective and space-citizenship dialectics Covers a wide range of practice areas of migration control in China today, from its hukou system to Beijing Municipality’s style of governance towards urban informalities