‘A study of impacts of migration on health and well-being in later life in China’ with Prof James Nazroo and Bo Hou

Past Event

Date
04 February 2016, 3:00pm - 4:30pm

Location
Oxford Institute of Population Ageing
66 Banbury Road, Oxford, OX2 6PR

This seminar is part of the Oxford Institute of Population Ageing Hilary Term 2016 Seminar Series 'Family dynamics, health and ageing in contemporary China' taking place every Thursday from 2 - 3.30pm in the Seminar at 66 Banbury Road, Oxford, OX2 6PR

Speakers:

  • Professor James Nazroo, Professor of Sociology and Director of Centre on Dynamics of Ethnicity, University of Manchester
  • Mr Bo Hou, PhD student, University of Manchester

Summary: China has undergone rapid urbanisation over the last few decades, involving both migration into urban areas and the geographical expansion of urban areas. While we know that both migration and urbanisation have a bidirectional relationship with health, this relationship has not been much studied in China. In fact, most of the literature on migration in China has only focused on one particular type of migration (temporary rural-to-urban movements), has only focused on the migration of relatively young people within the current economic and political context of market liberalisation, has largely neglected the impact of migration on health and well-being, and has neglected the long run effects of these processes in later life.

Using an interdisciplinary approach, this seminar will provide an overview of mechanisms that are theorised to explain the relationship between migration and health and well-being (in particular selection, material conditions and psychosocial circumstances), and how they might operate in China. It will then examine the association between different forms of migration and their relationship with later life health and well-being, and then attempt to draw conclusions on likely causal processes. To do this, we use the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, a nationally representative dataset that examines the circumstances of the Chinese population aged over 45 years old.

The analysis suggests that there is a strong relationship between migration and health and well-being for older adults in China, but that the nature of that relationship and the pathways through which it operates depends on the timing of migration and the type of migration experienced.

All welcome