The 2014 hukou reform introduced by the Chinese central government was a turning point in China’s policies towards migration. Different from the previous hukou policies, which were largely exclusionary, the reformed policy encouraged migrants to permanently settle in their destination cities and make use of the public services available there. However, the actual results and consequences of this policy seem to vary between cities. This is due to the fact that Chinese municipal governments still have their own discretionary power when it comes to defining the criteria for accessing a local hukou. This raises the question of what the real impact of the hukou policy reform has been. This paper attempts to answer this question. It starts with a...
China's New-type Urbanisation Plan heralded a new phase of reform of the household registration (huk...
China has created a dual hukou system to modernize and manage rural-urban migration. The system limi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87043/1/j.1465-7287.2010.00224.x.pd
The 2014 hukou reform introduced by the Chinese central government was a turning point in China’s po...
Along with a series of reforms of the household registration, or the hukou system, there has been a ...
One of the most dramatic social transitions in the post-reform China has been the internal migration...
China's floating population is one of the most mobile populations in the world. Most of its members ...
For anyone who has ever quit a job, packed up, and moved to a new city, it may come as a surprise th...
As China encourages urbanisation, a necessary process is the urbanisation of its people, granting lo...
Unlike most countries, China regulates internal migration. Access to public schools, health services...
Internal migration often differs from international migration in terms of citizens’ ideas about free...
Unlike most countries, China regulates internal migration. Access to public schools, health services...
China, a country with a population of 1.37 billion (of which 19.51 percent are internal migrants), h...
Labor force is very important to drive urban development. Labor contributes skills and generate posi...
In 2010s, for the first time, the Chinese government opened access to housing and urban citizenship ...
China's New-type Urbanisation Plan heralded a new phase of reform of the household registration (huk...
China has created a dual hukou system to modernize and manage rural-urban migration. The system limi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87043/1/j.1465-7287.2010.00224.x.pd
The 2014 hukou reform introduced by the Chinese central government was a turning point in China’s po...
Along with a series of reforms of the household registration, or the hukou system, there has been a ...
One of the most dramatic social transitions in the post-reform China has been the internal migration...
China's floating population is one of the most mobile populations in the world. Most of its members ...
For anyone who has ever quit a job, packed up, and moved to a new city, it may come as a surprise th...
As China encourages urbanisation, a necessary process is the urbanisation of its people, granting lo...
Unlike most countries, China regulates internal migration. Access to public schools, health services...
Internal migration often differs from international migration in terms of citizens’ ideas about free...
Unlike most countries, China regulates internal migration. Access to public schools, health services...
China, a country with a population of 1.37 billion (of which 19.51 percent are internal migrants), h...
Labor force is very important to drive urban development. Labor contributes skills and generate posi...
In 2010s, for the first time, the Chinese government opened access to housing and urban citizenship ...
China's New-type Urbanisation Plan heralded a new phase of reform of the household registration (huk...
China has created a dual hukou system to modernize and manage rural-urban migration. The system limi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87043/1/j.1465-7287.2010.00224.x.pd