This essay draws on an original cross‐sectional survey of 1,010 children and their guardians in highly migratory regions of Anhui and Jiangxi provinces located in China's interior. It uses propensity score matching, a technique that mitigates endogenity, to examine the impact of parental migration and post‐migration guardianship arrangements on the children's educational performance as measured by test scores for Chinese and mathematics. One core finding is that the educational performance of children is adversely affected by parental migration only when both parents migrate or when a non‐parent guardian is the principal carer. Additionally, longer durations of parental absence are associated with poorer educational performance. The migrati...
With rapid urbanization, millions of people from rural areas have migrated to major cities for emplo...
With the increasing transfer of rural labor, the problems of the left-behind children attract extens...
AbstractMany children worldwide are left-behind by parents migrating for work — over 61 million in r...
China’s rapid development and urbanization has induced large numbers of rural residents to migrate f...
<p>China’s rapid urbanisation has induced large numbers of rural residents to migrate from their hom...
A substantial amount of China’s rapid economic growth in has been attributed to its large proportion...
Migration is widely known as one of the main ways of alleviating poverty in developing countries, in...
Educational investment of families in their children is related to the sustainable development of bo...
Very preliminary draft: please do not cite without permission; comments welcome In recent years, Chi...
Since the end of 1990s, approximately 160 million Chinese rural workers migrated to cities for work....
Despite China's substantial internal migration, long-standing rural–urban bifurcation has prompted m...
BACKGROUND While many studies have found that migration can benefit home communities and family memb...
This paper examines the impact of labor migration on children’s education in ruralChina. Using cross...
It is now widely recognized that parental migration may have significant effects on children who are...
Migration is one of the main ways of alleviating poverty in developing countries, including China. H...
With rapid urbanization, millions of people from rural areas have migrated to major cities for emplo...
With the increasing transfer of rural labor, the problems of the left-behind children attract extens...
AbstractMany children worldwide are left-behind by parents migrating for work — over 61 million in r...
China’s rapid development and urbanization has induced large numbers of rural residents to migrate f...
<p>China’s rapid urbanisation has induced large numbers of rural residents to migrate from their hom...
A substantial amount of China’s rapid economic growth in has been attributed to its large proportion...
Migration is widely known as one of the main ways of alleviating poverty in developing countries, in...
Educational investment of families in their children is related to the sustainable development of bo...
Very preliminary draft: please do not cite without permission; comments welcome In recent years, Chi...
Since the end of 1990s, approximately 160 million Chinese rural workers migrated to cities for work....
Despite China's substantial internal migration, long-standing rural–urban bifurcation has prompted m...
BACKGROUND While many studies have found that migration can benefit home communities and family memb...
This paper examines the impact of labor migration on children’s education in ruralChina. Using cross...
It is now widely recognized that parental migration may have significant effects on children who are...
Migration is one of the main ways of alleviating poverty in developing countries, including China. H...
With rapid urbanization, millions of people from rural areas have migrated to major cities for emplo...
With the increasing transfer of rural labor, the problems of the left-behind children attract extens...
AbstractMany children worldwide are left-behind by parents migrating for work — over 61 million in r...