The Floating Population

Project on Chinese rural labour migration. Part of the group exhibition I Am a Native Foreigner at Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, February–June 2018

In the early 80s, upon the opening up of China’s economy under Deng Xiaoping, farmers left their hometowns seeking work in China’s developing cities as a response to the resulting agricultural reforms. These people from China’s vast rural areas are referred to as the ‘floating population’.

The term ‘floating population’ in China refers to people who have not in fact migrated, but who ‘float and move’ meaning that they are not, and generally will not become, a permanently settled group.
This transience is because the floating population has not been granted permanent, official household registration in the place in which they are residing. Members of the floating population frequently move back and forth between country and city and come and go with the seasons. (Dorothy J. Solinger, 1999, pp. 15–23)

China’s entire floating population of migrant workers reached a record 211 million in 2009. Last year, it was estimated that Beijing numbered 20 million people, with 7 million of them being part of the floating population.

Shot at the main entrances and exits of Beijing East Railway Station and bus station Zhaogongkou, the city’s most important transport hubs, these images present the ad hoc luggage of migrant workers, most of whom are employed in the field of construction. 

Related works

Maybe Beijing

Floating Population (Book)

 

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The Floating Population
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The Floating Population
The Floating Population
The Floating Population
 
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