Yangon, Myanmar, Brisbane, Australia, New Markert, Auckland, New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand.
United States of America
Cleveland, Honolulu, Hawaii, Houston, Oakland-Broadway, 7th Street, Harrison Avenue, 10 Street, Oklahoma-N. West 23rd Street and BLVD Class, Pittsburgh, Sacramento-3rd Street, 5th Street, J Street and I Street, Mexico City, Calgary, Canada, Edmonton, Cuba, Winnipeg.
Europe
Glasgow's Little Chinatown is a shopping center called "China City", which includes Moscow, Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool, Glasgow, Cardiff and Amsterdam.
Chinatown (also known as Chinatown or China City; English: Chinatown refers to the Chinese-inhabited areas in big cities in other countries except mainland China, Taiwan Province and Hongkong. Due to historical factors or special national conditions, Chinatown is very common in East Asia, Southeast Asia and North America. Chinatown was first formed in the United States and Canada in the19th century. At that time, because of discriminatory land laws and regulations, Chinese and other colored people were forbidden to intervene in the land market or only allowed Chinese to buy land in specific areas, thus forming the settlement of the first generation of Chinese immigrants.
Chinatown was formed because early Chinese immigrated overseas and became a local minority. Facing the new environment, they need to help each other in the same boat, so they live in groups. Therefore, most Chinatown is a witness to the history of overseas Chinese. In Southeast Asia, due to the history of early immigrants, language and culture are mostly integrated with the local area. In addition, because China people strive for the upper reaches, they generally control the local industrial dominance, which has also formed an interesting universal phenomenon.
Restaurants can often be found in Chinatown in North America. Restaurants and laundries were the main commercial industries of early overseas Chinese. Some historic Chinatowns are located in the old areas of big cities, and the environment will be more crowded. Public security and racial issues are also problems that some Chinatowns have to face. In some Chinatowns, the population of China has also moved away, and the population is aging.
On the other hand, with the formation of the concept of global village, governments of various countries have opened their participation rights to Chinese people for half a century, making their status abroad more fair. Due to the high-tech, business management and professional background of a new generation of Chinese immigrants from western countries and local Chinese, many families even have the economic ability to live in high-end residential areas. Several metropolises in North America have entered the "post-Chinatown" era, that is, the population and business activities of Chinese outside Chinatown have far exceeded the original Chinatown, and the population and business activities of Chinese are no longer gathered in a certain community, but scattered among the mainstream or other ethnic minorities in several neighboring communities in the suburbs. Examples of post-Chinatown include San Gabriel Valley in Los Angeles, California, Silicon Valley in the San Francisco Bay Area, Flushing in Queens, new york, Richmond and Burnaby in Vancouver, Canada, and scarborough and Markham in Toronto.