Front Page of the Day

No hukou, no way

beijing times March 24th, 2008.jpg
Beijing Times
March 24, 2008

Free admittance for 29 museums
The headline story: there will be 33 museums that will offer free admittance in Beijing. 29 of them are free of charge as of today, but visitors will need to book, either by registering on the museum's website or calling. None of the listed museums are major attractions for international tourists.

Hukou matters
The small headline and teaser on the left of the page is about 50 high school seniors who were not able to register for this year's National college entrance exam because of problems with their hukou (residence permit).

One of the students, surnamed Meng, has been educated in Beijing since kindergarten, and his parents have worked and lived in the capital for more than ten years. In the hope that Meng could take the exam in Beijing, his parents spent more than one hundred thousand yuan to buy him a "collective hukou" (集体户口) which proved as useless as his original Henan hukou.

Residents of Beijing, as the capital and one of the biggest cities of the country, enjoy favorable higher education opportunities. This obvious inequality has long been a subject of controversy and also encourages some so-called "education immigrants" to take the risk coming to Beijing to seek a better chance to go to university.

Fire put out
The big picture on the front-page is about a fire that was put out in Xicheng District in Beijng this morning. It was caused by gas explosion.

There are currently 0 Comments for No hukou, no way.

Post a comment

All comments are moderated and subject to review by Danwei contributors and editors, but well-grounded and articulate comments will be published regardless of which way they lean. Because comments published on any website ultimately contribute to the character of that website, we may decline to publish comments that are irrelevant, redundant, or that do not adhere to generally accepted standards of courtesy; if you are looking for a fight, there are plenty of other venues available online.


Some useful html: <b>bold</b>, <i>italic</i>,
<a href="http://www.danwei.org">link</a>

Media Partners
Visit these sites for the latest China news
090609guardian2.png 090609CNN3.png
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Danwei Model Workers
laomo2008fpA.jpg
Recommended blogs and new media
Books on China
Diamond Hill by Feng Chi-shun: Feng's memoir Diamond Hill describes an era of gambling and gangsters, Suzie Wong and squatter villages, fires and food stalls, and the Kowloon Walled City and its white powder. "A time when people were poor, but life was rich," he says. The world that he grew up in no longer exists, but his book - the first ever on the Diamond Hill refugee settlement, in either Chinese or English - offers a candid picture of what life was like for most Hong Kong residents in the 1950s.
William A. Callahan's China: The Pessoptimist Nation: China: The Pessoptimist Nation shows how the heart of Chinese foreign policy is not a security dilemma, but an identity dilemma. Through a careful analysis of how Chinese people understand their new place in the world, the book charts how Chinese identity emerges through the interplay of positive and negative feelings in a dynamic that intertwines China's domestic and international politics.
The WTO ruling: a half victory at best: In August 2009, a World Trade Organization panel ruled against China's system of monopoly control over entertainment products. Was this the victory supporters hailed as the dawn of a new day for American and global entertainment companies in the China market?
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ Street hawker cries of Beijing (2006.12): Yang Changhe demonstrates hawker's cries in a video shot by Muzimei.
+ New Weekly: Do Chinese kids know anything about traditonal Chinese culture? (2004.06): Q: Do you know what China's four great inventions are? Paper, printing, the compass and gunpowder 49.3% know all four, 37.3% get one or more wrong, 13.3% don't know at all (2004.06.12)
+ Some questions about SARFT's full-stop for Red Question Mark (2007.09): SARFT axes Red Question Mark (红问号). He Dong (何东) responds.
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky rsschiclet2.png (on the mainland)
or Feedburner rsschiclet.gif (blocked in China)
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Main feed: Main posts (FB has top links)
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Top Links: Links from the top bar
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Danwei Jobs: Want ads
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Danwei Digest: Updated daily, 19:30