ABSTRACT

This edited book highlights the identities and practices of ethnically diverse families and schools in contexts where multicultural policies are not always a priority. In an era of globalization and ensuing population mobility, it places a focus on Asia-Pacific, a continent with diverse customs, populations, and languages, but grapples with what it might mean to be multicultural.

The book features studies and frameworks that illustrate how minoritized communities engage with the diversity they live in and strategies in adjusting and adapting to their sociocultural environments, including practices that might support these efforts. This book represents initiatives and interdisciplinary scholarship from Japan, Hong Kong, mainland China, Australia, South Korea, Thailand, and Taiwan, which underscore the intersection of identities, cultural values, efforts, conflicts, and religions in making diversity work in their contexts. Collectively, these works make a unique contribution by invigorating debates on the flows and evolvement of cultural values and practices within and across families and institutions.

This book will appeal to researchers, practitioners, and readers with interest in the current state of cultural diversity among minoritized families in Asia-Pacific and beyond.

part I|72 pages

Resettlement and identities

chapter 142|16 pages

Socializing strategies, family language policies, and practices

An autoethnographic study of a transcultural family in southwest China

chapter 3|18 pages

Negotiating hyphenated identities in diaspora

Indigenous Chakma immigrants from Bangladesh in Melbourne

chapter 5|17 pages

Navigating academic and career pathways in the era of neoliberalism

Educational trajectories of first-generation immigrant youth in Japan

part II|90 pages

Family and community resources

chapter 866|13 pages

Minority family and community resources

Funds of knowledge and university access and choice

chapter 9|23 pages

Exploring the education of international students in a Korean elementary school

The case of foreign-born students in Gyeonggi province

chapter 10|18 pages

Community connections for equity and inclusion

Toward a research agenda

part III|10 pages

Conclusion

chapter 17611|8 pages

Family diversity in Asian contexts

Local multiculturalisms for new contexts