Global city competition and new hierarchies of urban citizenship in China’s migration regime

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This chapter explores how China’s central and local governments steer who becomes an urban citizen and whether there are early indications of an integrated approach of governing migration in the making. It investigates the evolution of China’s differentiated and localized citizenship regime as well as the policies of immigration and foreign residency at the national level. Hierarchical differentiation within local citizenship regimes included relatively preferential treatment of college graduates, experts in science and technology, and well-to-do investors and taxpayers. The recent reforms centralize many aspects of the governance of internal migration, but they do not abandon local differentiation. China’s relationship with foreigners within its territory has long been characterized by a high degree of ambivalence. The cities of Shanghai and Yiwu are both located in the prosperous Yangtze River Delta. In 2018, the Shanghai Municipal Government adapted its point-based system for residence status.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationImmigration Governance in East Asia : Norm Diffusion, Politics of Identity, Citizenship
EditorsGunter Schubert, Franziska Plümmer, Anastasiya Bayok
Number of pages24
PublisherRoutledge
Publication dateNov 2020
ISBN (Electronic)9781003099543
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2020

ID: 284492246