Cumulative causation, market transition, and emigration from China

This article reports findings from a recent survey of international migration from China's Fujian Province to the United States. Using the ethnosurvey approach developed in the Mexican Migration Project, the authors conducted surveys in migrant-sending communities in China as well as in destina...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe American journal of sociology Vol. 114; no. 3; p. 706
Main Authors Liang, Zai, Chunyu, Miao David, Zhuang, Guotu, Ye, Wenzhen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.11.2008
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Summary:This article reports findings from a recent survey of international migration from China's Fujian Province to the United States. Using the ethnosurvey approach developed in the Mexican Migration Project, the authors conducted surveys in migrant-sending communities in China as well as in destination communities in New York City. Hypotheses are derived from the international migration literature and the market transition debate. The results are generally consistent with hypotheses derived from cumulative causation of migration; however, geographical location creates some differences in migration patterns to the United States. In China as in Mexico, the existence of migration networks increases the propensity of migration for others in the community. In contrast to the Mexican case, among Chinese immigrants, having a previously migrated household member increases the propensity of other household members to migrate only after the debt for previous migration is paid off. In step with market transition theory, the authors also find that political power influences the migration experience from the coastal Fujian Province.
ISSN:0002-9602
DOI:10.1086/592860