ABSTRACT

Since the 1978 opening up of China and her active engagement in economic reformation and modernization, China has become a truly global economic power. These developments have, consequently, had an impact on ethnic Chinese people living across the world.

Traditionally, the study of immigrant communities has focused on internal factors, such as the leadership and social organization of the actors inside the communities. This book, however, turns attention to the exogenous factors, which have helped shape the lives of the Chinese diaspora. In doing so, it provides a valuable contribution to the recent literature, which focuses on the effect of globalisation on the Chinese overseas. Using a number of empirical case studies, including the San Francisco Bay, Canada, South Africa and Hungary, it provides an investigation into how China’s contemporary position in the world has affected the identity of the various locales of the Chinese in different continents. Whilst demonstrating the implications of China’s rise on patterns of circular migration and transnational movements, it also explores how the social and economic relations between Chinese communities and their host and ancestral countries have changed. Ultimately, it highlights how China’s rise has brought new economic opportunities and political clout for the Chinese overseas, but at the same time, has created new stereotypes and racial images by association.

As an in-depth study of Chinese societies as well as current migration trends, this book will be useful for students of Chinese Studies, Ethnic Studies, Anthropology and Sociology.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Contemporary China’s rise and the Chinese overseas

chapter 2|19 pages

From Cold War to open door

The making of the Chinese community in Canada

chapter 5|21 pages

Cultural ties and states’ interests

Malaysian Chinese and China’s rise

chapter 6|11 pages

Rethinking “pauk-phaw”

Chinese migrants, ethnic interaction and China’s rise

chapter 7|14 pages

Loving the money but not the migrants

Hungarian attitudes toward the Chinese

chapter 8|12 pages

China in Cuba in the shadow of normalization of US–Cuba relations

Observations on the ground in Havana

chapter 9|30 pages

Ethnically diverse diasporas and migrations from China to Central Asia in the twenty-first century

Origin and contemporary challenges with special reference to Kazakhstan

chapter 10|25 pages

China’s new global position

Changing policies toward the Chinese diaspora in the twenty-first century