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How urban welfare affects the hukou selection of rural migrants that belong to dual-hukou families in china
Published 2025-01-01Subjects: “…Dual-hukou…”
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Prolétarisation incomplète et miracle économique chinois : entre héritage collectiviste et capitalisme transnational
Published 2017-06-01Subjects: Get full text
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Logements sociaux à Chongqing et à Shanghai. Corollaires de l’« urbanisation » rurale et de la financiarisation foncière
Published 2020-11-01Subjects: Get full text
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Where you live, what you do: depression differences among diverse Chinese nongmin through cognitive openness
Published 2025-01-01“…ObjectiveThis study aims to investigate the depression levels among Workers with Agricultural Hukou (WAH) in China, considering their varied living environments, types of work, and social discrimination experiences. …”
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An explainable Bayesian gated recurrent unit model for multi-step streamflow forecasting
Published 2025-02-01“…The EB-GRU is examined by forecasting the multi-step streamflow at Hukou and Qilishan stations in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River Basin, and compared with the Transformer (TSF), multi-layer perceptron (MLP) and support vector machine (SVM).New hydrological insights for the region: The comparative results show that the performance of the proposed EB-GRU surpasses that of the TSF, except for the streamflow forecast at the Hukou station with a 1-day lead time. …”
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The Chinese State, Incomplete Proletarianization and Structures of Inequality in Two Epochs
Published 2011-01-01“…The Chinese household registration system (hukou) has played a pivotal role in the “regulation” of the formation of the working class under conditions of free and unfree markets, in ways that invite comparison with the Act of Settlement in England prior to the era of the Speenhamland system, which hindered the movement of rural labor.5 The hukou regime has imposed conditions of severe inequality on migrants and their families, initially in the years 1960 to the late 1970s when rural to urban migration and market activity were virtually foreclosed, but also in the subsequent era when the state encouraged migration and market activity, while maintaining differential access to education, health care, retirement pensions etc., distinguishing those “sojourning” in the cities from those with full urban citizen rights on the basis of hukou.6Less studied, but equally important, in our view, is the interrelationship between inequality, on the one hand, and savings and underconsumption, on the other. …”
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