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Urban China in Transition
"Chinese cities are changing in incredibly complex and fascinating ways, and this volume presents a very impressive set of research studies of a wide range of aspects of such changes, written by first rate scholars. Anyone interested in changing urban social patterns in the world's most dynamic and populous society will want to consult this volume." "John Logan’s kaleidoscopic collection offers diverse perspectives on urban dynamics in China, while simultaneously setting China’s cities in a comparative context that ranges from Russia to the United States. Globally oriented urbanists and China specialists alike will find it a valuable new resource."
–Martin K. Whyte, Harvard University
–Peter Evans, University of California, Berkeley
John Logan (Edited by), JR Logan (Author)
9781405161466, Wiley
Paperback / softback, published 18 December 2007
384 pages
23 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm, 0.562 kg
These essays on recent Chinese urban developments--particularly trends in migration, labor economics, housing, economic and sociospatial inequality, and governance--offer macro and micro perspectives through analysis of nationwide patterns or developments in specific cities, thus capturing the regional diversity and types of cities in China. Editor Logan is careful not to present the Chinese instance as exceptional, but to situate it within a wider context through comparative analysis. He pairs up scholars from different disciplines and areas for each essay in order to set up comparison between Chinese urban developments and those in the US, Latin America, Europe, and Asia. Logan asked the contributors to view their data through four theoretical lenses: modernization (Simon Kuznet's model), dependency/world system, developmental state, and market transition. By doing so, contributors discover meaningful differences that reveal trends unique to the Chinese context. On the whole, this collection offers undergraduates an accessible introduction to contemporary urban developments in China and to a wide range of qualitative and quantitative analyses commonly used in the social sciences. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All academic levels/libraries. -- L. Teh, University of Chicago (Choice, February 2009)
Using an innovative approach, this book interprets the unprecedented transformation of contemporary China’s major cities. It deals with a diversity of trends and analyzes their sources.
Notes on the Contributors viii Series Editors’ Preface xiii Acknowledgments xiv Introduction: Urban China in Comparative Perspective 1 Part I: Market Transition in Work Units and the Labor Market 25 1 Two Decades of Reform: The Changing Organization Dynamics of Chinese Industrial Firms 27 2 The Myth of the “New Urban Poverty”? Trends in Urban Poverty in China, 1988–2002 48 3 Class Structure and Class Inequality in Urban China and Russia: Effects of Institutional Change or Economic Performance? 66 4 Gender and the Labor Market in China and Poland 89 Part II: Changing Places 113 5 Urbanization, Institutional Change, and Sociospatial Inequality in China, 1990–2001 115 6 Growth on the Edge: The New Chinese Metropolis 140 7 Mirrored Reflections: Place Identity Formation in Taipei and Shanghai 161 8 Is Gating Always Exclusionary? A Comparative Analysis of Gated Communities in American and Chinese Cities 182 Part III: Impacts of Migration 203 10 Trapped in Neglected Corners of a Booming Metropolis: Residential Patterns and Marginalization of Migrant Workers in Guangzhou 226 11 Migration and Housing: Comparing China with the United States 250 Part IV: Social Control in the New Chinese City 269 12 Economic Reform and Crime in Contemporary Urban China: Paradoxes of a Planned Transition 271 13 Migration, Urbanization, and the Spread of Sexually Transmitted Diseases: Empirical and Theoretical Observations in China and Indonesia 294 14 The State’s Evolving Relationship with Urban Society: China’s Neighborhood Organizations in Comparative Perspective 315 Subject index 336 Author index 355
John R. Logan and Susan S. Fainstein
Shahid Yusuf and Kaoru Nabeshima
Simon Appleton and Lina Song
Yanjie Bian and Theodore P. Gerber
C. Cindy Fan and Joanna Regulska
Michael J. White, Fulong Wu, and Yiu Por (Vincent) Chen
Yixing Zhou and John R. Logan
Jennifer Rudolph and Hanchao Lu
Youqin Huang and Setha M. Low
9 Urbanization in China in the 1990s: Patterns and Regional Variations 205
Zai Liang, Hy Van Luong, and Yiu Por (Vincent) Chen
Min Zhou and Guoxuan Cai
Weiping Wu and Emily Rosenbaum
Steven F. Messner, Jianhong Liu, and Susanne Karstedt
Christopher J. Smith and Graeme Hugo
Benjamin L. Read and Chun-Ming Chen
Subject Areas: Geography [RG]
