I think China is a good reminder that the word "migrant" is just newspeak, most countries use it to refer to people fromother countries, China use it for people from another city...
I'm pretty sure China uses some Chinese word instead. And at least around here (European country), "migration" and "migrants" are also used when referring to people moving between regions inside the same country.
外地 (wai di)- from outside places/soil. Not nationality bound, more a term for migrant workers 'not being from around here'. But using this term suggests some comfort or familiarity with the local place. Otherwise, just state origin.
本地 (ben di)- from local / basic soil. Often used as a badge of pride.
民工 (min gong)- common term for migrant worker in China. Interesting decomposition of the work - 民 (min) meaning a person, or member of the people. 工 (gong) meaning work (with one's hands, literal). This would be the closest match for a European moving country in seek of wage.
In many states of India, you will be called an immigrant, not just migrant. Generally, the choicest of abuses are reserved for Bihari migrants though. Not so for educated migrants for Kerala, for example. Most Indian states have cultural identities stronger than even some European nation states and hence the conflict with the other.
Yeah, I don't even think most people in the US would use the word migrant to talk about someone from Canada. When I hear "migrant worker", the image in my head is agricultural workers coming from Mexico.
Migrant workers, not migrant refugees. These are people who comes from poor rural communities in search of better jobs and future, not opportunistic economic migrants who come to take advantage of an European welfare state.
Also note that without a hukou they receive limited education and government services. This prevents them from settling in the cities they work in.
Have you ever actually spoken to one of those "opportunistic economic migrants" who apparently don't like the bad economic situation of places like syria, anymore?
How do you sort out people who comes from poor rural communities in search of better jobs and future from the opportunistic economic migrants who come to take advantage of an European welfare state?
1. strange to see low quality politics news on frontpage
2. the public shaming is backed by the company whos boss was chief of security of high rank national leader
3. its not migrant worker. LangZhong where the story happened is a 99th tier town and sichaun province as a whole is a cheap labor source. Those workers are likely local.
4. those unpaid workers literally dragged a police officer to city hall as hostage asking for unpaid wage. Please be aware its not the government who owns these worker money.
5. unpaid peasant workers can be taken advantage of in china. e.g. your construction contractor finishes a low quality job, you are unwilling to pay 100%, contractor directly asks swarm of peasant workers to protest 7x24 and threaten you in various means until you pay up.
why govn't involed in all this? obviously commies has above the law regulation that peasant workers wage has a higher priority than everyone else, it's regarded as a highly politically correct thing to do. And most impirtantly, courts worked like shit in chinar.
Karma comes around. With all the posts about this on HN, Reddit, and elsewhere, one could observe that the Chinese city itself is now being shamed publicly also.