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BUCKINGHAM, WILL (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   084462


Is China abolishing the Hukou System / Chan, Kam Wing; Buckingham, Will   Journal Article
Chan, Kam Wing Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract In recent years, China has instituted a variety of reforms to its hukou system, an institution with the power to restrict population mobility and access to state-sponsored benefits for the majority of China's rural population. A wave of newspaper stories published in late 2005 understood the latest round of reform initiatives to suggest that the hukou is set to be abolished, and that rural residents will soon be "granted urban rights." This article clarifies the basic operations of the hukou system in light of recent reforms to examine the validity of these claims. We point out that confusion over the functional operations of the hukou system and the nuances of the hukou lexicon have contributed to the overstated interpretation of the initiative. The cumulative effect of these reforms is not abolition of the hukou, but devolution of responsibility for hukou policies to local governments, which in many cases actually makes permanent migration of peasants to cities harder than before. At the broader level, the hukou system, as a major divide between the rural and urban population, remains potent and intact.
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2
ID:   159916


One City, Two Systems: Chengzhongcun in China’s Urban System / Buckingham, Will   Journal Article
Buckingham, Will Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Chengzhongcun, or ‘villages-in-the-city’, have been a major feature of China’s urban landscape in the post-Mao era. The existing literature largely casts them as side effects of rapid urbanization or a momentary oddity of market transition providing temporary solutions to urban needs until more efficient mechanisms for affordable housing and social welfare are developed. This article positions chengzhongcun within the broader system of unequal exchange that is at the heart of China’s rural–urban dual system and development model. This article argues that chengzhongcun are an inherent feature of China’s post-Mao urbanization model, a physical manifestation of its dual system that differentially regulates people and space according to their classifications as ‘rural’ or ‘urban’. China’s urban development must be understood as a product of this dual system based on the exploitation of the rural sector, including its land, property and people.
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