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NING, YUEMIN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   147827


Social integration of migrants in Shanghai’s urban villages / Wang, Mingfeng ; Ning, Yuemin   Journal Article
Ning, Yuemin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Through questionnaire investigation and factor analysis, this article explores the status of social integration of migrants in Shanghai’s urban villages. e results show that social integration of migrants can be mapped on four dimensions: social relation integration, economic integration, psychological integration, and cultural integration. According to the factor scores, the overall level of social integration of migrants is not high, and economic integration is the lowest. Furthermore, the results of multiple linear regression analysis show that, on the whole, the destination place factors of migrants exert more inuence on social integration in urban villages than the individual factors. Individual factors play the most important roles in determining the status of psychological integration,
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2
ID:   147825


Staying in the countryside or moving to the city: the determinants of villagers’ urban settlement intentions in China / Chuankai Yang ; Xu, Wei ; Ning, Yuemin ; Liu, Ye   Journal Article
Chuankai Yang Wei Xu, Ye Liu, Yuemin Ning Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract China has experienced an unprecedented surge of rural to urban migration since the mid-1980s, which has led to rapid growth of the urban population, especially in major cities. This study investigates urban settlement intentions of 4,116 rural residents using data from the Chinese General Social Survey in 2010. Based on a multilevel logistic model, the study focuses on the role of individual, household, and contextual factors in determining urban settlement intentions of rural residents. It was found that more than 90 percent of villagers in the survey do not intend to move to and settle in a city within the next ve years. Among those who have some intention to settle in a city, nearly two-thirds plan to settle in small towns or small cities rather than larger cities. e results show that villagers’ urban settlement intentions are shaped, both independently and interactively, by individual, household, and contextual factors.
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