List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction: Citizenship, Markets, and the State
Appendix: What Is the Floating Population?
PART ONE: STRUCTURE
2 State Policies I: Turning Peasants into Subjects
3 Urban Bureaucracies I: Migrants and Institutional
Change
4 The Urban Rationing Regime I: Prejudice and Public
Goods
PART TWO: AGENCY
5 State Policies II: The Floating Population Leaves Its Rural
Origins
6 Urban Bureaucracies II: Peasants Enter Urban Labor
Markets
7 The Urban Rationing Regime II: Coping Outside
It and Alternate Citizenship
Conclusion: Floating to Where? Citizenship and the Logic of the
Market in a Time of Systemic Transition
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Dorothy J. Solinger is Professor of Politics and Society at the University of California, Irvine. Her most recent books are From Lathes to Looms: China's Industrial Policy in Comparative Perspective, 1979-1984 (1991) and China's Transition from Socialism: Statist Legacies and Market Reforms (1993).
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