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Expelled by Beijing
UW geography professor, Kam Wing Chan, weighs in on Beijing's population control actions outlined in this in-depth report.
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Opinion | Can we please stop holding up China’s schools as a model for the US? It’s ridiculous
Thanks to the work of UW geographer Kam Wing Chan, we know Shanghai, Beijing and other urban areas in China discriminate against the children of low-income migrant workers in public education. -
Portland's growing divide: The wealthy and the rest of us
The issue of whether to raise minimum wage has business owners divided. Richard Morrill, professor emeritus of geography at the UW, is quoted.
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History meets geography: James Gregory’s collaborative digital project tracks key 20th century social movements
It’s one thing to read that the NAAPC grew from three branches in 1912 to 894 branches in 1945, but it’s more revealing to watch that expansion on an interactive map.
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In reforming its hukou system, is China also creating a labor shortage for its biggest cities?
"China's decision to allow more families to have a second child is an effort to confront the problem of an aging population," writes Kam Wing Chan, professor of geography at the UW. -
China could give 100 million people new identities in a bid to save its economy
Chinese officials are set to discuss ways to stimulate the country's sputtering housing market. Kam Wing Chan, professor of geography at the UW, is quoted.
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China moves to normalize the status of millions of people on margins
China said it would normalize the status of millions of people who had lived on the margins of society. Kam Wing Chan, professor of geography at UW, is quoted.
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Chinese parents go to court seeking to register 2nd children
Wan Changru's 6-year-old daughter is legally unregistered because her parents broke China's one-child policy in having her. Kam Wing Chan, a geography professor, is quoted.
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Did you just say ‘The’ Puget Sound?
The evolution of place's names in the Seattle area. Matt Sparke, professor of geography and international studies at the UW, is mentioned.
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How Seattle district elections could change city
The August primary election is two weeks away, and Seattle City Council races are kicking into high gear. Now candidates will run based on district thanks to a map drawn by a UW geographer. -
Shedding light on complexities of poverty
The way people think about poverty affects both how important we think fighting poverty is. UW's Victoria Lawson and Sarah Elwood, geography professors, are quoted. -
Students put GIS skills to use on social justice projects
The juniors and seniors in Elwood’s GIS Workshop course are applying lessons learned in class to projects with local nonprofits ranging from food banks to criminal justice organizations. -
UW-led network seeks to reframe poverty locally and globally
Two University of Washington geography professors are leading an effort with what might be considered a staggeringly ambitious goal — to reframe how poverty is perceived and studied around the world. -
As middle class fades, so does use of term on campaign trail
The once ubiquitous term "middle class" has gone conspicuously missing from the 2016 campaign trail, as candidates and their strategists grasp for new terms for an unsettled economic era. -
China's sustainable cities of the future
Kam Wing Chan, a professor of geography, comments on China's rural-urban migrants.