China's urban billion : the story behind the biggest migration in human history
著者
書誌事項
China's urban billion : the story behind the biggest migration in human history
(Asian arguments)
Zed Books, 2012
- : hbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [180]-186) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
By 2030, China's cities will be home to 1 billion people - one in every eight people on earth. What kind of lives will China's urban billion lead? And what will China's cities be like?
Over the past thirty years, China's urban population expanded by 500 million people, and is on track to swell by a further 300 million by 2030. Hundreds of millions of these new urban residents are rural migrants, who lead second-class lives without access to urban benefits. Even those lucky citizens who live in modern tower blocks must put up with clogged roads, polluted skies and cityscapes of unremitting ugliness. The rapid expansion of urban China is astonishing, but new policies are urgently needed to create healthier cities.
Combining on-the-ground reportage and up-to-date research, this pivotal book explains why China has failed to reap many of the economic and social benefits of urbanization, and suggests how these problems can be resolved. If its leaders get urbanization right, China will surpass the United States and cement its position as the world's largest economy. But if they get it wrong, China could spend the next twenty years languishing in middle-income torpor, its cities pockmarked by giant slums.
目次
Introduction: The Biggest Migration in Human History
1. By the Sweat of Their Brows: The People Who Built Urban China
2. Passport to Purgatory: Fixing the Hukou System
3. Farm versus Factory: The Battle over Land
4. The Construction Orgy: Paving the Fields
5. Ghost Towns in the Desert: How China Builds Its Cities
6. A Billion Wallets: What China's New Urbanites Will and Won't Buy
Conclusion: Civilizing the Cities
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