The people of Dragon Ditch Village had been farming for centuries before they elected 27-year-old Eastern Sun as their leader. When Eastern Sun unveiled his plan to build a ten-story eco-hotel
and flood the villagers’ cornfields so that the hotel would have a lake view, how do you think the villagers reacted? They turned to me and smiled. "We think of him like our son." In Permanent
Migrants, Amos Irwin abandons the usual top-down view of contemporary China in favor of conversations with the Chinese people themselves. From the cement factories of Inner Mongolia to the
temples of Shanxi, Permanent Migrants investigates the lives of village politicians, monks, undercover cops, and migrant noodle chefs. While they race to get ahead in the fastest-changing
economy in the world, they struggle with the test-centric educational system, with the One Child Policy, and with hukou, the population control system that makes two in ten Chinese people
illegal migrants in their own country. Permanent Migrants is based on dialogues with Chinese people eager to talk to their first-ever foreigner. It provides the reader with incisive
explanations of Chinese policy and twentieth-century history. It illustrates not only the incredible warmth and generosity of these individuals, but also their place in the rapid yet
restrictive evolution of modern China.