11 results on '"Fan C"'
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2. Gender and generational differences in first outward- and first inward-moves: An event-history analysis of rural migrants in China.
- Author
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Chen, Chen and Fan, C. Cindy
- Subjects
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GENDER differences (Sociology) , *IMMIGRANTS , *CITIES & towns , *TIME-varying systems , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Focusing on the onset of circularity, this paper examines the first outward-moves and first inward-moves of rural–urban migrants in China. Using event-history analysis, we investigate the impacts of time-varying individual and household characteristics on the mobility of 787 rural workers from six villages in Anhui Province, based on a longitudinal study of 150 households for the period 1980 to 2009. The findings show that the probability of initiating the first outward-move and first inward-move is affected by age, gender, education, decade, and life-cycle and household-arrangement factors such as the location of dependent children, spouse, and elderly parents. New-generation migrants are more likely to move outward and spend longer time outside the home location than their predecessors. Gender differences persist; women continue to be less likely to move outward and more likely to return, and their mobility patterns are much more sensitive to caregiving needs than men. These results suggest that migrants’ circularity will persist and that China’s urbanization policy should consider multi-locality as a central component of migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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3. Agglomeration, (un)‐related variety and new firm survival in China: Do local subsidies matter?
- Author
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Howell, Anthony, He, Canfei, Yang, Rudai, and Fan, C. Cindy
- Subjects
NEW business enterprises ,EMPIRICAL research ,SUBSIDIES ,ECONOMIES of agglomeration ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance - Abstract
Copyright of Papers in Regional Science is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Rural-urban circularity in China: Analysis of longitudinal surveys in Anhui, 1980–2009.
- Author
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Chen, Chen and Fan, C. Cindy
- Subjects
RURAL geography ,CITIES & towns ,MIGRANT labor ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,POISSON regression - Abstract
Hundreds of millions of migrants from rural China circulate between their home villages and host cities. While existing research tends to focus on the question of permanent settlement in cities, the phenomenon of circularity which has prevailed for decades is not well understood. For example, how often do migrants return, how long do they stay before migrating again, and whether and how these behaviors have changed over time, are seldom studied. Drawing from the longitudinal migration histories of 530 rural migrants from six villages in Anhui Province and using multi-level Poisson regression models, this paper examines how rural-urban circularity has changed since the 1980s. We found that migrants who first left for migrant work in the 2000s spent less time in the home location when they return, compared to those who first left in earlier decades. Male migrants return less frequently than female migrants; and younger migrants return less than older migrants. Migrants who have had high-school education, and who have young children, a spouse, and a high-quality house at the home location tend to return more frequently and spend more time when they return than other migrants. Women’s circularity is more sensitive to the number of dependent children and the decade of first out-migration than men; and men’s circularity is more sensitive to education level and generation than women. Our findings underscore circularity as a fundamental attribute of rural-urban migration in China, identifies the gender and generational differences in circularity, and highlights the social and household ties that sustain migrants’ motivation to return/circulate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
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5. Migration and Inequality in Xinjiang: A Survey of Han and Uyghur Migrants in Urumqi.
- Author
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Howell, Anthony and Fan, C. Cindy
- Subjects
- *
UIGHUR (Turkic people) , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *SOCIAL conditions of immigrants , *HETEROGENEITY , *LABOR market -- Social aspects , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
The article focuses on a paper which explores on Han-Uyghur inequality through the comparison of Han and Uyghur migrants at Urumqi, Xinjiang in China. It says that base on a survey of 30 sites conducted in 2008, it is crucial to consider the role of self-initiated migration. It states that through the analyses of migration characteristics, findings show that Uyghur migrants do not seem disfavored compared to Han migrants. Moreover, heterogeneity of Urumqi's labor market is also investigated.
- Published
- 2011
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6. Urban Villages in China: A 2008 Survey of Migrant Settlements in Beijing.
- Author
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Siqi Zheng, Fenjie Long, Fan, C. Cindy, and Yizhen Cu
- Subjects
MIGRANT labor ,FOREIGN workers ,EMPLOYMENT in foreign countries ,ECONOMIC consumption surveys ,HOUSING ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
The article investigates the living and work conditions and housing consumption behavior of migrants in Chinese cities particularly on chengzhongcun or urban villages. It notes the willingness of migrant workers to pay the same or higher rent per unit of space even though they consume much smaller dwelling spaces than local residents. It depicts the consideration given by migrant workers on the city as a place to work rather than a home in which to live.
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- 2009
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7. Potential Biofumigation Effects of Brassica oleracea var. caulorapa on Growth of Fungi.
- Author
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Fan, C. M., Xiong, G. R., Qi, P., Ji, G. H., and He, Y. Q.
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COLE crops , *BRASSICA , *FUNGI , *BROMOMETHANE , *PLANT cells & tissues , *SOILBORNE plant diseases , *GLUCOSINOLATES , *PEST control - Abstract
Biofumigation, as an environment-friendly alternative to methyl bromide is gaining attention in sustainable agricultural production systems. Based on the biofumigation suppression of growth of three soil-borne filamentous fungi ( Fusarium sp., F. oxysporum and P. aphanidermatum) , Brassica oleracea var . caulorapa was selected from eight Brassica and other plant species as a potential material for the purpose. Powdered tissues of plants were confined to individual Petri dishes without physical contact with each of the following 28 fungal isolates from 16 hosts: 13 Fusarium spp., two Verticillium dahliae, two Ceratocystis fimbriata, Bipolaris sorokiniana, Gaeumannomyces graminis, Ceratobasidium cornigerum, Rhizotonia cerealis, Phytophthora parasitica, Phytophthora capsici, Botrytis cinerea, two Rhizoctonia solani, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and Magnaporthe grisea. The level of suppression of growth 7 days after inoculation varied. Based on growth suppression, the 28 isolates were grouped into three clusters by Fuzzy clustering: Cluster I contains F. proliferatum with 20.5% suppression, Cluster II composed of 15 isolates, Fusarium sp., two V. dahliae, two C. fimbriata, B. sorokiniana, C. cornigerum, two R. solani, R. cerealis, S. sclerotiorum, P. parasitica and M. grisea, with 75.2–100% suppression and Cluster III consisted of 12 isolates; five F. oxysporum, F. solani, F. azysporum, F. moniliforme, F. graminearum, F. verticillioides, G. graminis, P. capsici with 40.7–66.2% suppression. Ceratobasidium fimbriata and V. dahliae were more sensitive to biofumigation than S. sclerotiorum and F. culmorum when different amounts of ground powder were used. One gram of powder could suppress the growth of the former two up to 68.6% and 68.7%, but the growth suppression in the latter two by 12.7% and 24.0%, respectively. These results indicated that the amount of plant tissue to be used should be considered depending on target pathogen species. The swollen root of B. oleracea var. botrytis appeared a better material than the leaf for achieving suppression of growth in pathogenic fungi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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8. The state, the migrant labor regime, and maiden workers in China
- Author
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Fan, C. Cindy
- Subjects
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WOMEN migrant labor , *EXPLOITATION of humans , *LABOR market - Abstract
Recent research (re)emphasizing the role of the state and the institutional perspective generally neglects socialist economies. At the same time, feminist studies on migration rarely focus on mobility in transitional contexts. Informed by these two bodies of literature, this paper examines how the post-Mao state in China has fostered a migrant labor regime and the incorporation of young, single rural women, dubbed “maiden workers,” into urban work. I argue that the Chinese state has taken on a developmentalist mandate and by doing so has also transformed gender relations in the peasant household and in the urban labor market. By analyzing narratives from a survey of peasant households in Sichuan and Anhui, I emphasize the central role of state policies and institutions, especially the household registration (hukou) system, in channeling peasants to specific sectors and jobs and creating an exploitative migrant labor regime. The incorporation of maiden workers into migrant work and the relative absence of married women in the rural–urban migrant labor force, reflect interactions between institutional controls, gender ideology, and demands of the migrant labor regime. An approach that integrates gender and institutional perspectives is useful because it foregrounds the state’s role in constructing differences based on hukou status, locality, class, and gender. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2004
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9. Householding and split households: Examples and stories of Asian migrants to cities.
- Author
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Fan, C. Cindy
- Subjects
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URBAN growth , *HOUSEHOLDS , *URBAN planning , *GENDER , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Given the central role of households in motivating and implementing migration, this paper argues that the "householding" and split-household approaches are fundamental and essential for migration research, by drawing from original research on rural-urban migrants in China and four published studies on Asian migrants. Translocality and household-splitting that enable the earning of remittances or help meet other family goals such as children's education, set in motion processes of gender and intergenerational divisions of labor that involve both the migrants and the left-behind, and have implications for urban development in large cities as well as cities near rural areas. Hundreds of millions of rural migrants in China circulate between their home villages and host cities, and large numbers of women from Southeast Asia work overseas. Likewise, skilled migrants from South Asia and East Asia maintain transnational households that straddle their home and host countries. Household biographies and interviewees' narratives from these examples highlight two strategies of migrants and their family members: their flexibility and frequent changes of location, work, activity, and household arrangement; and their reinventing women's and men's responsibilities without challenging traditional gender ideology. These stories underscore the importance of householding and split-households for informing contemporary migration theories and research. • Both international and internal migrants pursue "householding" and split-household strategies. • Both migrants to cities and the left-behind contribute to sustaining and maintaining the split households. • Members of split households change frequently their location, work, and household arrangement. • Migrants and the left-behind reinvent their family responsibilities vis-à-vis gender norms. • Experiences of Asian migrants to cities are important for migration theories and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Occupancy, usage and spatial location of second homes in urban China.
- Author
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Li, Tianjiao and Fan, C. Cindy
- Subjects
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SECOND homes , *HOMESITES , *HOME ownership , *METROPOLITAN areas , *FAMILIES ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
Since the late 1980s, homeownership in China has rapidly increased, and along with it the phenomenon of second homes. While research on multiple homes in China has examined second homes' ownership and tenure choice, little is known about the usage and spatial location of second homes. Using the nationally representative data from the 2015 China Household Finance Survey, this paper aims at documenting and analyzing the occupancy, usage and location of second homes of urban households in China. About 20% of urban households in China own second homes. Their leading usages are vacancy, renting and helping relatives, with only small percentages used for weekday commuting and leisure. Second homes' usage is influenced by the household's life cycle, socioeconomic status, the homes' and regional characteristics, and it differs among commodity housing and policy-related housing. Second homes are more common in large cities and in heavily urbanized areas, and they tend to be in relative proximity to primary homes. Unlike mature housing markets in Western countries where second homes are used primarily for leisure and income-generation, multiple homeownership in urban China reflects both family life cycle and institutional constraints more so than leisure pursuit. • Second homes in China are in highly urbanized areas and close to primary homes. • Second homes in urban China reflect consumption needs and institutional constraints. • Second homes are used for vacancy, renting and by relatives, rather than leisure. • Second-homes' usage differs between commodity housing and policy-related housing. • Family life cycle, socioeconomic status, the home's and regional characteristics influence usage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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11. The evolution of productivity performance on China's dairy farms in the new millennium.
- Author
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Ma, H., Oxley, L., Rae, A., Fan, C., Huang, J., and Rozelle, S.
- Subjects
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DAIRY farms , *STOCHASTIC processes , *DAIRY industry research , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
China's dairy farm structure has experienced fundamental changes across farm types. As the number of backyard farms has dramatically declined, the share of dairy cows from backyard farms has decreased by 22.4% from 2003 to 2008. However, the herd numbers of larger dairy farms have increased. In particular, the share of dairy cows has risen by 18.8% on small farms, by 22.2% on medium farms, and by 80.8% on large farms over the same period. Total factor productivity was decomposed into technical efficiency and technological change on China's dairy farms using the stochastic production frontier framework. The estimated results indicate that patterns of productivity growth appear to have shifted in the 2000s compared with the 1990s, from generally driven by technological change to exclusively driven by technological change on backyard and small farms and uniquely driven by the improvement of technical efficiency on large farms. Tests of the econometric assumption indicate that the variations in total factor productivity growth patterns across farm types and regions are likely caused by the feed input biases and cropping production practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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