Based on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews conducted in the mid-2000s, this article discusses the educational strategies and emerging trajectories of Chinese children born or raised locally in Hungary. Born to small entrepreneurs who migrated to Hungary in the 1990s, these children exemplify a second generation issuing from a migration taking place in conditions sharply different from earlier migrant flows to Western Europe, North America and Southeast Asia. This first migrant generation came of age in the post-reform People's Republic of China (PRC) and generally maintains both Chinese citizenship and a political and emotional identification with the PRC. Based on findings in Hungary, this article argues that this cohort of migrants' c...
China has been the leading source of foreign students pursuing tertiary degrees in other countries....
This research examines the emerging phenomenon of Chinese urban upper-middle-class families sending ...
In July 2010, the State Council of the People\u27s Republic of China published an Outline for Natio...
"Many young children of Chinese migrant families’ are temporarily sent to live with paid Hungarian f...
Public education remains the nation-state's foremost instrument of forging citizens. But the emergen...
This ethnographic paper discusses childcare practices of Chinese entrepreneurs in Hungary from an an...
Surprisingly little research has been conducted on Chinese students in Hungary, despite their growin...
Middle-class parents in China are increasingly torn between the need to secure their child's future ...
This chapter reviews and interprets the main points of contact between the ethnic and transnational ...
The recent wave of the emigration of well-to-do Chinese from the People’s Republic of China (PRC) ha...
Studying in Hungary has become a new trend among Chinese students under the Belt and Road Initiative...
The education of the children of migrants is a policy issue of great importance in both China and th...
The present article draws attention to the significance of the “Christian” component in researching ...
The rural-urban migrant children in China has become a hot spot in different disciplines. This disse...
The study discusses, contrasts and criticizes the two main research perspectives in the research fie...
China has been the leading source of foreign students pursuing tertiary degrees in other countries....
This research examines the emerging phenomenon of Chinese urban upper-middle-class families sending ...
In July 2010, the State Council of the People\u27s Republic of China published an Outline for Natio...
"Many young children of Chinese migrant families’ are temporarily sent to live with paid Hungarian f...
Public education remains the nation-state's foremost instrument of forging citizens. But the emergen...
This ethnographic paper discusses childcare practices of Chinese entrepreneurs in Hungary from an an...
Surprisingly little research has been conducted on Chinese students in Hungary, despite their growin...
Middle-class parents in China are increasingly torn between the need to secure their child's future ...
This chapter reviews and interprets the main points of contact between the ethnic and transnational ...
The recent wave of the emigration of well-to-do Chinese from the People’s Republic of China (PRC) ha...
Studying in Hungary has become a new trend among Chinese students under the Belt and Road Initiative...
The education of the children of migrants is a policy issue of great importance in both China and th...
The present article draws attention to the significance of the “Christian” component in researching ...
The rural-urban migrant children in China has become a hot spot in different disciplines. This disse...
The study discusses, contrasts and criticizes the two main research perspectives in the research fie...
China has been the leading source of foreign students pursuing tertiary degrees in other countries....
This research examines the emerging phenomenon of Chinese urban upper-middle-class families sending ...
In July 2010, the State Council of the People\u27s Republic of China published an Outline for Natio...