Urbanization, Suburbanization, and Population Redistribution in Urban China: A Case Study of Nanjing

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Publication Type journal article
School or College College of Social & Behavioral Science
Department Family & Consumer Studies
Creator Qin, Xianhong; Wei, Dennis Yehua; Yu, Zhou; Xiong, Ning
Title Urbanization, Suburbanization, and Population Redistribution in Urban China: A Case Study of Nanjing
Description This paper analyzes the urbanization and suburbanization of Nanjing, an ancient capital and a new Tier-1 city in China, from 1990 to 2015. We use on China's census and survey microdata and the shift-share methods to examine population redistribution and spatial expansion in the city. The results show two distinct periods of population growth and distribution. In the 2000s, intracity migration led to urban spatial expansion and the population of the inner suburbs grew much faster than that of the city center. Urban residents moved from the city center to the suburbs for better living conditions. In the early 2010s, urban growth was fueled by rural urban migration for employment opportunities and for city-living due to the relaxation of migration rules. Population growth was concentrated in the newly developed outer suburbs. Urban growth and population redistribution were led by two countervailing movements, the suburbanization of urban residents and the continued rural-urban migration (urbanization). However, unlike most U.S. cities, despite suburbanization, Nanjing has kept the high population density in its city center.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
First Page 1
Last Page 20
Subject Urbanization; Suburbanization; Migration; Population Redistribution; Nanjing, China
Language eng
Rights Management Xianhong Qin; Yehua Dennis Wei; Zhou Yu; and Ning Xiong
Rights License A revised version published in Journal of Urban Planning and Development This paper analyzes the urbanization and suburbanization of Nanjing-a new Tier-1 city and historical capital of China-from 1990 to 2015. After studying the interplay between economic and political forces which propelled urban spatial expansion, we rely on Chinese census and survey microdata and use the shift-share and migration analysis methods to examine population redistribution and spatial expansion in the city. The results show two distinct periods of urban growth. In the 2000s, intracity migration led to urban spatial expansion and the population of the inner suburbs grew much faster than that of the city center. Urban residents moved from the city center to the suburbs for better living conditions. In the early 2010s, urbanization was fueled by rural-urban migration for employment opportunities and for city-living due to the relaxation of migration rules. Population growth was concentrated in the newly developed outer suburbs. Unlike most U.S. cities, Nanjing has kept the high density in its city center. The population redistribution and urban growth were led by two countervailing movements-the suburbanization of urban residents and the continued rural-urban migration
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s6gwjwvq
Setname ir_uspace
ID 1937261
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6gwjwvq
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