Type | Journal Article - Modern China |
Title | Urbanization and rural-urban migration in China since 1982: a new baseline |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 20 |
Issue | 3 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1994 |
Page numbers | 243-281 |
URL | http://www.jstor.org/stable/189200 |
Abstract | It would not be an exaggeration to say that the People's Republic of China has one of the world's most complex systems of defining urban population. As evidenced by the massive literature generated, China watchers in the West have expended an enormous amount of energy in trying to understand the Chinese system. About a decade ago, in one of the apparently futile quests, the size of the Chinese urban population was declared an insoluble "enigma" (Orleans and Burnham, 1984). Today we are, of course, better off: the baffling mysteries surrounding China's urban population size between 1949 and 1982 have since been cleared up through the assiduous work of many scholars (Chan and Xu, 1985; Ma and Cui, 1987). In rapidly changing China, however, recent developments in the definition of what is "urban" and urban boundaries since 1983 have, among other things, created many new problems for urbanists in their attempt to understand urbanization and migration in mainland China in the 1980s. |
» | China - National Population Census 1990 |