TY - BOOK AU - Wu,Chongqing TI - Mapping China: peasants, migrant workers and informal labor T2 - Rethinking socialism and reform in China SN - 9789004326385 AV - HD1537.C5 PY - 2016///] CY - Leiden, Boston PB - Brill KW - Peasants KW - China KW - Economic conditions KW - Migrant labor KW - Informal sector (Economics) KW - Rural population KW - Paysannerie KW - Chine KW - Conditions économiques KW - Travailleurs migrants KW - Secteur informel (Économie politique) KW - Population rurale KW - BUSINESS & ECONOMICS KW - Labor KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE KW - Labor & Industrial Relations KW - HISTORY / Social History KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Series Foreword; Introduction; Chapter 1 Small Farming in the Market Economy: A Study of a Village in Shandong, and Its Theoretical Significance; Chapter 2 "Beyond the Boundary": A Countermovement to the Hollowing-out of Rural China; Chapter 3 Social Ties and the Market: A Study of Digital Printing Industry from an Informal Economy Perspective; Chapter 4 Discursive Dyslexia and the Articulation of Class: A Theoretical Perspective on China's Young Female Migrant Workers (Dagongmei); Chapter 5 The Class Formation: Control of Capital and Collective Resistance of Chinese Construction WorkersChapter 6 Internet Mobilizing and Workers' Collective Resistance at OEM Factories; Chapter 7 The Impacts of Labor Migration on Rural Poverty and Inequality; Index N2 - This collection includes seven articles from the journal 'Open Times', a window into contemporary Chinese academic trends. All the articles deal with the topic of "peasants, migrant workers and informal labor," but each has a different emphasis. It illustrates various ways that people from a countryside make use of local social resources to seek out ways to making a living. In these models, we can still see traditional social networks, various degrees of ties based on kinship and locality, and the existence of humans as social groups. It also analyzes Dagongmei's collective actions to fight against the capital and patriarchy, workers' collective resistance at OEM factories, and the impacts of labor migration on rural poverty and inequality UR - https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctv2gjwt9r ER -