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Bingyu Wang - New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand: Becoming Cosmopolitan? Roots, Emotions, and Everyday Diversity

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New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand: Becoming Cosmopolitan? Roots, Emotions, and Everyday Diversity: summary, description and annotation

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There are growing waves of desirable migrants from Asia moving to New Zealand, a place experiencing increasing ethnic diversity, particularly in its largest metropolitan region Auckland. In purely demographic terms much of this diversity has been generated by policy shifts since the 1980s and the adoption of a comparatively liberal immigration policy based on personal merit without discrimination on the grounds of race, national or ethnic origin. Due to these changes, migrants from China, and Asia more broadly, have become increasingly significant in migration flows into New Zealand. This in turn makes New Zealand a valuable case study for understanding how Chinese migrants integrate into and affect their host nation.

Wang attempts to close a gap in contemporary research by relating cosmopolitanism to migration, particularly in the Asian context. With a cosmopolitan gaze towards migration studies, she makes four key contributions to the ongoing scholarly discussion. Firstly, this is the first comprehensive study to use cosmopolitanism as a framework to study the lives of contemporary Chinese migrants, with implications for migration studies as a whole. It sheds light on the relationship between cosmopolitanism and migrant mobility, taking a new approach to examine the living paradigms of international migrants. Secondly, this book identifies the emergence and development of cosmopolitanism outside the domain of Western middle-class groups. The concept of rooted cosmopolitanism is utilised to break down the Eurocentric notion of cosmopolitanism, and to show the role played by Chinese rootedness during the process of becoming cosmopolitan and encountering diversity. Thirdly, the book advances and enriches the knowledge of studies in everyday cosmopolitanism, by focusing on cosmopolitanism from below, locating quotidian and down-to-earth cosmopolitan engagements that are grounded in everyday migrant lives. Fourthly, it looks at the emotional dimension of migrants negotiating difference and engaging in cosmopolitanism, particularly the ways in which emotions undermine and promote the development of cosmopolitan sociability.

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New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand There are growing waves of desirable - photo 1
New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand
There are growing waves of desirable migrants from Asia moving to New Zealand, a place experiencing increasing ethnic diversity, particularly in its largest metropolitan region Auckland. In purely demographic terms, much of this diversity has been generated by policy shifts since the 1980s and the adoption of a comparatively liberal immigration policy based on personal merit without discrimination on the grounds of race or national or ethnic origin. Due to these changes, migrants from China, and Asia more broadly, have become increasingly significant in migration flows into New Zealand. This in turn makes New Zealand a valuable case study for understanding how Chinese migrants integrate into and affect their host nation.
Wang attempts to close a gap in contemporary research by relating cosmopolitanism to migration, particularly in the Asian context. With a cosmopolitan gaze towards migration studies, she makes four key contributions to the ongoing scholarly discussion. Firstly, this is the first comprehensive study to use cosmopolitanism as a framework to study the lives of contemporary Chinese migrants, with implications for migration studies as a whole. It sheds light on the relationship between cosmopolitanism and migrant mobility, taking a new approach to examine the living paradigms of international migrants. Secondly, this book identifies the emergence and development of cosmopolitanism outside the domain of Western middle-class groups. The concept of rooted cosmopolitanism is utilised to break down the Eurocentric notion of cosmopolitanism and to show the role played by Chinese rootedness during the process of becoming cosmopolitan and encountering diversity. Thirdly, the book advances and enriches the knowledge of studies in everyday cosmopolitanism, by focusing on cosmopolitanism from below, locating quotidian and down-to-earth cosmopolitan engagements that are grounded in everyday migrant lives. Fourthly, it looks at the emotional dimension of migrants negotiating difference and engaging in cosmopolitanism, particularly the ways in which emotions undermine and promote the development of cosmopolitan sociability.
Bingyu Wang is an associate professor in the School of Sociology and Anthropology, Sun Yat-sen University, China.
Chinese Worlds
Series Editors:
Gregor Benton
Flemming Christiansen
Terence Gomez
Hong Liu
Chinese Worlds publishes high-quality scholarship, research monographs and source collections on Chinese history and society. Worlds signals the diversity of China, the cycles of unity and division through which Chinas modern history has passed and recent research trends toward regional studies and local issues. It also signals that Chineseness is not contained within borders ethnic migrant communities overseas are also Chinese worlds.
Documentary, World History, and National Power in the PRC
Global Rise in Chinese Eyes
Gotelind Mller
Ethnic Chinese Entrepreneurship in Malaysia
On Contextualisation in International Business Studies
Michael Jakobsen
Chinese Student Migration and Selective Citizenship
Mobility, Community and Identity between China and the United States
Lisong Liu
Mixed Race Identities in Asia and the Pacific
Experiences from Singapore and New Zealand
Zarine L. Rocha
Qiaopi Trade and Transnational Networks in the Chinese Diaspora
Edited by Gregor Benton, Hong Liu and Huimei Zhang
New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand
Becoming Cosmopolitan? Roots, Emotions, and Everyday Diversity
Bingyu Wang
For more information about this series, please visit www.routledge.com/asianstudies/series/SE0663.
New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand
Becoming Cosmopolitan?
Roots, Emotions, and Everyday Diversity
Bingyu Wang
New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand Becoming Cosmopolitan Roots Emotions and Everyday Diversity - image 2
First published 2019
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
2019 Bingyu Wang
The right of Bingyu Wang to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalog record for this book has been requested
ISBN: 978-0-815-36820-5 (hbk)
ISBN: 978-1-351-25571-4 (ebk)
Typeset in Galliard
by Apex CoVantage, LLC
For my mother ()and father ()
Contents
  1. i
  2. ii
First of all, I want to thank my study participants who showed interest in my research and spent their precious time sharing life stories with me. This book would not have been possible without them.
My greatest thanks go to Emeritus Professor Manying Ip, Dr. Francis Collins, Distinguished Professor Paul Spoonley, Dr. Rumi Sakamoto, Associate Professor Ward Friesen and Associate Professor Amanda Wise for their kindest guidance and generous support throughout the years of my research. Dr. Collins has provided me with great inspiration and encouragement for my research and at the same time has been a role model to me as a hardworking, creative and successful scholar. Working with Francis has been a wonderfully pleasant and invaluable learning experience. Associate Professor Ward Friesen offered me swift assistance in organising and finalising the figures included in this book. I am grateful for his friendliness and kindness. Special thanks go to Dr. Francis Collins, Dr. Nicholas Smith and Dr. Sally Liangni Liu for all the useful information and practical guidance they have provided to me during certain stages of preparing this book.
I also want to thank Sage and Taylor & Francis for granting permissions to reuse some of the materials that have been previously published in their journals. The two articles published by Sage are: 1) Wang, Bingyu. 2016a. Emotions and Home-making: Performing Cosmopolitan Sociability amongst First Generation New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand. Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 25(2):130147. 2) Wang, Bingyu. 2016b. Performing Everyday Cosmopolitanism? Uneven Encounters with Diversity Amongst First Generation New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand. Ethnicities. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1177/1468796816671977. The two articles published by Taylor & Francis are: 1) Wang, Bingyu, and Francis Collins. 2016a. Emotions and Cosmopolitan Sociability: Barriers and Opportunities for Intercultural Encounters amongst New Chinese Migrants in New Zealand.
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