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University of California Press

About the Book

For nearly four decades, China’s manufacturing boom has been powered by the labor of 287 million rural migrant workers, who travel seasonally between villages where they farm for subsistence and cities where they work. Yet recently local governments have moved away from manufacturing and toward urban expansion and construction as a development strategy. As a result, at least 88 million rural people to date have lost rights to village land. In Beneath the China Boom, Julia Chuang follows the trajectories of rural workers, who were once supported by a village welfare state and are now landless. This book provides a view of the undertow of China’s economic success, and the periodic crises—a rural fiscal crisis, a runaway urbanization—that it first created and now must resolve.

About the Author

Julia Chuang is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Boston College.
 

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Index of Characters

1. China’s Rise
2. A Tale of Two Villages
3. Into the World of Chinese Labor
4. Rural/Urban Dualism
5. Urbanization and the New Rural Economy
6. Paradoxes of Urbanization
7. The Future of Chinese Development

Appendix
Notes
References
Index

Reviews

"Chuang’s book is a tour de force in revealing the complexities and interconnections of China’s economic boom, especially the more recent developments occurring in the country’s interior provinces."
Exertions

"This book is an outstanding new contribution to the literature on China’s urbanization as well as on socioeconomic development more broadly. Moreover, it is a very engaging read. I would highly recommend it to experts, scholars, as well as students from related disciplinary backgrounds."

Asien: The German Journal on Contemporary Asia
 "Beneath the China Boom is an excellent example of unlocking large-scale social processes through multisited ethnography."
American Journal of Sociology
"This book does exactly what it promises, revealing the local-level dynamics and the human dimensions of the greatest socioeconomic transformation in history. Through an ethnography of the villages and networks through which urban construction workers are recruited, Chuang provides a rich and theoretically powerful story of how land and labor have been intertwined in the making of China's boom. Weaving together politics, class, gender, and local state institutions, Beneath the China Boom stands as a seminal sociological account of how macro-level forces have to be understood through changing social relations. This is a must-read for all scholars of China, development, and sociology."—Patrick Heller, Lyn Crost Professor of Social Sciences, Brown University

"Julia Chuang addresses one of the most important questions of our day—the changing social foundations of Chinese economic expansion, its future development as well as the reasons for its past success. A brilliant, multi-sited ethnography of the shift from migrant labor to land expropriation, whose findings will reverberate around the Global South."—Michael Burawoy, University of California, Berkeley

“A rare ethnography that strikes the right balance between micro- and macro-level analysis.”—Ho-Fung Hung, Wiesenfeld Professor in Political Economy, Johns Hopkins University
 

Awards

  • Transnational Asia Book Award Honorable Mention 2021 2021, American Sociological Association SECTION ON ASIA AND ASIAN AMERICA
  • Labor and Labor Movements Section Distinguished Scholarly Book Award 2021 2021, American Sociological Association Section on Labor and Labor Movements
  • Sociology of Development Book Award Honorable Mention 2021 2021, American Sociological Association Section on Sociology of Development