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Table of Content

    01 January 2018, Volume 4 Issue 1
    Socioeconomic integration of early professional Hong Kongers in Taipei, Taiwan
    Lan Hung Nora Chiang and Ping Lin
    2018, 4(1):  3-29.  doi:10.1177/2057150X17747507
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    This study applies the thesis of privileged migration to early Hong Kongers coming to Taiwan since the early 1960s as a case study in 'North-South' migration that takes place between regions that are in different stages of economic development. Its focus is on these immigrants’ economic achievements and their social and cultural integration in the host society. Qualitative methods were used to conduct face-to-face interviews with 40 Hong Kongers ranging in age from 39 to 77, most of whom were living in Taipei. They came as overseas Chinese students, employees, and marriage and family migrants. As most had received university educations or higher, their skills and working experiences met the demands of the Taiwan job market at the time, and they had all become successfully established in a variety of white-collar professional jobs. Despite cultural differences, they had developed careers, contributed to Taiwan's economy, and integrated well, and most were not thinking of returning to Hong Kong.

    What keeps China's floating population from moving?
    Pu Hao and Shuangshuang Tang
    2018, 4(1):  30-55.  doi:10.1177/2057150X17748296
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    Research on China's internal migration has mostly focused on moving rather than staying. Urban destinations of migrants are often seen as discrete points of economic opportunity in space, exerting a magnetic force on the rural population from the countryside. But after commencing their urban lives, rural migrants start to perceive their host cities and towns as places that entail value and meaning, which may encourage them to settle. This paper examines how the settlement intentions of rural migrants vary across urban destinations and socioeconomic backgrounds. A questionnaire survey dataset of 10,896 rural migrants in cities of different tiers in Jiangsu Province is used to unravel the factors that predict rural migrants' settlement intentions. In addition, interviews with rural migrants and their family members are examined to explore the personal experiences and subjective perceptions that may contribute to their inclinations
    to settle in the city. Results indicate that the factors which encourage rural migrants to settle differ significantly from those which drive them to migrate. Economic and social resources and a resultant sense of (in)security are the prominent factors affecting rural migrants' intentions to settle in cities.

    Live like mosquitoes: Hukou, rural-urban disparity, and depression
    Qiang Fu, Cary Wu, Heqing Liu, Zhilei Shi and Jiaxin Gu
    2018, 4(1):  56-78.  doi:10.1177/2057150X17748313
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    Although there has been a longstanding curiosity about the socio-political consequences of China's remarkable urban-rural divide, we have yet to understand the divide's possible influence on mental health. Using data from the 2016 wave of the China Laborforce Dynamics Survey (CLDS), we find that depressive symptoms of both rural-urban migrants and rural residents are significantly higher than those of urban residents. Consistent with the fundamental-causes-of-disease and stress-exposure perspectives, results from zero-inflated negative binomial regression suggest that such differences in depressive symptoms can be attributed to socioeconomic status and proximate stressors such as unemployment, living alone, and the unaffordability of medical services. In particular, the rural-urban difference in depressive symptoms is explained away by educational attainment. A further investigation using spline Poisson regression suggests
    that the protective effects of the period of middle school, which vary substantially across demographic groups, are especially relevant to the rural-urban disparity in depression. We argue that hukou is a fundamental cause of disease in China and mental health is an important yet understudied area where China's salient urban-rural inequality strikes.

    Labor market integration of non-Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong from 1991 to 2011: Structure of global market or White privilege?
    Yuying Tong, Wenyang Su and Eric Fong
    2018, 4(1):  79-108.  doi:10.1177/2057150X17748533
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    Previous studies of Hong Kong immigrants have largely focused on those Chinese from the mainland, and less attention has been paid to non-Chinese immigrants. As exceptions to this, a few studies have focused on the channels of non-Chinese immigrants to Hong Kong, but less research has examined their labor market outcomes. This is partly because theories about immigrants in Asia's global city are underdeveloped, and the traditional labor market assimilation theory based on the North American and European experience may not easily translate to the case of global cities in Asia. In this research, we examine the employment status, occupational rank, and earnings outcomes of Chinese and non-Chinese immigrants from the perspectives of global economic structure and White privilege. Using 5% Hong Kong census/by-census data from 1991, 1996, 2001, 2006, and 2011, we draw two major conclusions. First, in the Hong Kong labor market, immigrants from more developed countries enjoy a labor market advantage, which demonstrates the advantages of core-nation origin. In contrast,
    their counterparts from peripheral nations are penalized. The labor market gap between immigrants from core nations and peripheral nations grew at the turn of the 21st century but narrowed in 2006. Second, White immigrants are privileged in the Hong Kong labor market, showing that White privilege has been transmitted to a non-White-dominant society.

    Producing society or the self-producing of society? A study of an NGO's difficult situation on poverty reduction
    Feiyu Sun, Huijuan Chu and Yanlong Zhang
    2018, 4(1):  109-144.  doi:10.1177/2057150X17729335
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    How social organizations that envision social reforms interact with existing social and political structures in their practice is key to the understanding of philanthropic organizations and their social actions in the current Chinese context. To address this issue, a 'social production' perspective was adopted and the structural features and poverty alleviation practices of a philanthropic organization, which has successfully solved the entry problem whilst clearly recognizing and maintaining its independence, were studied. The organization, with a clear vision, actionable goals, compatible and strict management as well as monitoring systems, has encountered many obstacles that are inconsistent with its goals. The organization may thus be unable to realize its goals in practice, may fall into a detached state, and even become a structural space for the reproduction of local society. This paper attempts to provide an understanding of the obstacles that this organization encountered from a 'state-society' perspective and study it by re-embedding the organization into the local social-political context. It is
    argued that this organization became an academically interesting entity because it illustrates the complexity of the transition process of Chinese society and provides for observation of the society's self-reproduction process. Thus the various social realities and problems observed from this organization's practices and actions can be seen as analogous to China's current political and social issues; as such it can therefore help with developing a holistic understanding of the phenomena, mechanisms and issues in China's political and social transition process.

    On the reproduction of gender inequality in the premium effect of the Internet on wage: A case study based on data from the Chinese Women’s Status Survey (third phase)
    Jiachi Zhuang, Aiyu Liu and Chao Sun
    2018, 4(1):  145-163.  doi:10.1177/2057150X17751331
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    By using the Propensity Score Matching model, this study proves the existence of an Internet premium effect. After other factors are controlled, it is found that the average wage income of Internet users is 1.38 times that of non-users. At the same time, there are significant gender differences in the premium effect of the Internet on wages: Women's Internet wage premium is 90.6% that of men. Furthermore, it is found that the Internet premium effect on wages is highly related to users’ online behaviors. Compared with female users, male users are more inclined to use Internet resources to acquire knowledge and human capital; among female users, those with a greater conception of gender equality are more inclined to use the Internet for learning and accumulation of human capital. Using the framework of previous research on gender inequality in cyberspace, this study focuses on how gender perception influences Internet users' preferences and ways of using the Internet, which is an important cause and mechanism of reproduction of gender inequality in cyberspace.