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Results tagged “migration”

Children left behind by China's modernization

   

A series of photos entitled "My younger brother wants to sleep", in which a schoolgirl is seen taking care of her younger brother during class, recently went viral on the Chinese internet. The girl in the photo, Long Zhanghuan, is from a small village in Central China's Hunan Province. The boy she is looking after is her 2-year-old cousin. more ›

Watch: China Calling -- Alberta's new relationship with the Chinese

Watch: China Calling -- Alberta's new relationship with the Chinese

Via The Calgary Herald: "China and Alberta. On the surface, they don't appear to be natural partners. One is a Communist country that sits on the far left of the political spectrum; the other is an entrepreneurial Conservative bastion halfway around the world. But if you think China and Alberta don't have a lot in common, think again." more ›

Photos: Police escort for the long (motorcycle) ride home

        

With less than a week to go before Chinese New Year, the whole populace is scurrying to find a way back home for the holidays. And even despite the fact that our nation's train network is developing at a positively nauseating speed, scores of people still miss out on train seats. But no worries, we're a resourceful people and in what could be the new trend for 2011, many people are choosing to moto it home. more ›

Video: China's Internal Migrants

Video: China's Internal Migrants

We've highlighted mini-documentaries on the plight of migrant workers before, but there can't be enough said about these 200 million generally faceless people who have borne the burden of China's economic boom on their backs. more ›

Current TV: China's secret workers

‘From Camilla French and Judy Brettschneider of Current TV:

Gathering Dust’ is a collection of fleeting portraits of migrants in Beijing. It visits a cleaner, a migrant school teacher, street vendors, sex workers and migrant children. These migrants come from poor rural areas, and when in Beijing, live at the fringes of urban society. Yet they perform many of the menial jobs without which, Beijing’s and China’s astonishing development would not be possible. We wanted to capture these stories on film and spent 3 weeks in Beijing shooting the project. It wasn’t always easy, as migration is a sensitive subject. We found many closed doors, especially with the Olympics only one year away. But in the end, we wanted to focus on personal stories of migrating to Beijing from different parts of China.” Official statistics place the number of internal migrants over 130 million: 10% of China’s entire population. Today, they make up more than 40% of the urban workforce, and being largely unskilled labourers, and perform menial tasks such as rubbish collection and construction. Despite their large numbers, internal migrants are strongly disenfranchised compared to urban residents. China’s household registration system (hukou) ties government services to native place and occupation. Poor migrants are prevented from accessing social services in urban areas, such as subsidized housing, free education and pensions. Living conditions are often cramped, and diseases such as HIV and tuberculosis spread easily. In 2006, 80% of new HIV cases reported in Beijing were migrant workers. Children inherit the hukou from their parents, and without government education, they have little chance on improving their social status. Annual school fees in Beijing exceed the income of some construction workers. Roughly half of migrant children therefore cannot attend school, and nearly 10% are forced to drop out. There are cheaper ‘migrant schools’. But teaching is often sub-standard, and diplomas are largely unrecognized by state education authorities.
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