Also, compared
to Hong Kong
of the 1960s,
New York of
the latter 19th
century,
Manchester,
England of the
early 19th
century, what
is similar to
and what is
different from
the full-bore
industrialization
and
urbanization
in the Pearl
River Delta
today?
And the
peasant
migrants who
make up the
bulk of the
industrial
workforce:
what are they
thinking, what
are they
looking for,
and what are
they willing
to take? Is
anything,
anywhere,
better than
holding a plow
steady behind
a plodding
ox?

The title
question will
be answered
and the
implications
explored based
on interviews
conducted this
summer with
factory owners
and managers,
migrant
workers,
government
officials,
scholars,
social
workers, and
human rights
observers,
mostly in the
Pearl River
Delta, but
also in Hong
Kong and New
York.