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Integrations,identity and conflicts: A cross-border perspective on residential relocation of Hong Kong citizens to Mainland China
Authors:Eddie Chi Man Hui  Francis Kwan Wah Wong  Si Ming Li  Ka Hung Yu
Affiliation:1. Department of Transport, Technical University of Denmark, Bygningstorvet 116B, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark;2. Technische Universität Dresden, Faculty of Traffic Sciences “Friedrich List”, Institute of Transport & Economics, Germany;1. Department of Urban Planning, College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Tongji University, 1239 Siping Road, Shanghai 200092, China;2. Shanghai Urban Construction Vocational College, 2080 Nanting Road, Shanghai 201415, China;3. School of Architecture, the University of Texas at Austin, 310 Inner Campus Drive, Austin 78712, TX, USA;4. Department of Public Policy, City University of Hong Kong, Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong;5. School of Social Development and Public Policy, Fudan University, Liberal Arts Building of Fudan University, 220 Handan Road, Shanghai 200433, China;6. Shanghai Jiguang College, 2859 Shuichan Road, Shanghai 201901, China
Abstract:
This paper aims to test if traditional literature on both internal residential mobility and international migration hold up in explaining the driving forces behind the home-moving behaviours of Hong Kong residents to the Chinese Mainland, under a mixture of economic integrations, past connections along with present structural and identity differences. The multi-dimensionality of this behaviour, in comparison to other forms of residential movements in the literature, is shown as there is no single attribute, albeit all necessary conditions, sufficient enough to encourage such movement on its own. Instead, the cross-border residence is primarily a middle-class, middle-aged phenomenon, due to one’s past connections with Mainland China throughout his/her life course and the possession of financial resources insufficient to afford larger living space in Hong Kong yet enough to benefit from the remarkable living cost advantages on the other side of the border. It provides some directions for studying similar forms of residential mobility in the era of globalization when the functions of national borders have become more obscure than before. Implications from this residential behaviour are then discussed.
Keywords:
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