Migration, Ethic Relations And Chinese Business (chinese Worlds)

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Incorporating research carried out over the last twenty years, this book documents the personal and collective responses of Chinese migrants and refugees to the prejudice and discrimination they have experienced. Using case studies of Chinese communities in Canada, Chan explores the different defence mechanisms Chinese migrants have created in order to escape the systemic and institutionalized discrimination they face. In particular, the book analyzes Chinese entrepreneurship, arguing that it is a collective response to blocked opportunities in host societies. Drawing upon empirical and theoretical literature on the sociology of race and ethnic relations, the book stresses the variety in Chinese culture and its ability to exploit an emergent ethnicity as individuals, groups and communities.

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Migration, Ethnic Relations and Chinese Business Incorporating research carried out over the last twenty years, Migration, Ethnic Relations and Chinese Business documents the personal and collective responses of Chinese migrants and refugees to the prejudice and discrimination they have experienced. Using case studies of Chinese communities in Canada, Chan argues that a defence mechanism has been created by Chinese immigrants in order to escape the systemic and institutional discrimination they face. Feeling themselves to be strangers, migrants tend to gravitate towards each other, forming their own closeknit communities and ethnic enterprises. This text analyses how many Chinese overseas choose to subject themselves to internal exploitation at work rather than face discrimination in the mainstream labour market – with a mixture of positive and negative consequences. Drawing upon empirical and theoretical literature on the sociology of race and ethnic relations, the book stresses the variety in Chinese culture and its ability to exploit an emergent ethnicity as individuals, groups and communities. Fascinating, incisive and eye-opening, it will be a welcome addition to researchers and students of racism, ethnic studies, and Chinese studies. Chan Kwok-bun is Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology and Director of the David C. Lam Institute for East–West Studies at the Hong Kong Baptist University. Chinese Worlds Chinese Worlds publishes high-quality scholarship, research monographs, and source collections on Chinese history and society. ʻWorldsʼ signals the diversity of China, the cycles of unity and division through which Chinaʼs modern history has passed, and recent research trends towards regional studies and local issues. It also signals that Chineseness is not contained within borders – ethnic migrant communities overseas are also ʻChinese worldsʼ. The series editors are Gregor Benton, Flemming Christiansen, Delia Davin, Terence Gomez and Frank N. Pieke. The Literary Fields of Twentieth-Century China Edited by Michel Hockx Chinese Business in Malaysia Accumulation, ascendance, accommodation Edmund Terence Gomez Internal and International Migration Chinese perspectives Edited by Frank N. Pieke and Hein Mallee Village Inc. Chinese rural society in the 1990s Edited by Flemming Christiansen and Zhang Junzuo Chen Duxiuʼs Last Articles and Letters, 1937–1942 Edited and translated by Gregor Benton Encyclopedia of the Chinese Overseas Edited by Lynn Pan New Fourth Army Communist resistance along the Yangtze and the Huai, 1938–1941 Gregor Benton A Road is Made Communism in Shanghai, 1920–1927 Steve Smith The Bolsheviks and the Chinese Revolution, 1919–1927 Alexander Pantsov Chinas Unlimited Gregory Lee Friend of China – The Myth of Rewi Alley Anne-Marie Brady Birth Control in China, 1949–2000 Population policy and demographic development Thomas Scharping Chinatown, Europe An exploration of overseas Chinese identity in the 1990s Flemming Christiansen Financing Chinaʼs Rural Enterprises Jun L