ID | 147828 |
Title Proper | From newcomers to middle class |
Other Title Information | the social and spatial mobility of new urban migrants |
Language | ENG |
Author | Song, Yu-Ling |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | is article studies the relationship between social and spatial mobility of new urban migrants and residents. e objective is to present the inuences of the household registration system on the social mobility of China’s new urban migrants through a comparison of the dierences and similarities between these two groups. Two data sets are adopted in this article: the Blue Book of Youth Nos. 1 and 2 and in-depth interviews conducted during the summers of 2009, 2010, and 2011. ematic analysis was employed to understand their social mobility aer spatial mobility. Results show that new urban migrants are relatively vulnerable. While society generally expects them to assimilate rather than achieve upward social mobility, the hukou system limits their access to social welfare and security. Meanwhile, new urban residents who have access to advantages consider themselves lower-middle class in terms of consumption, and maintain certain flexibility to further establish their social and economic status. In this article, “opportunity” is a significant theme. New urban residents strive to leverage their urban resident status to create individual wealth. |
`In' analytical Note | China Review Vol. 16, No.3; Oct 2016: p.121–147 |
Journal Source | China Review 2016-10 16, 3 |
Key Words | Middle Class ; Spatial Mobility ; Newcomers ; New Urban Migrants ; Social Mobality |