'Save the children!': Governing left-behind children through family in China's Great Migration

被引:24
|
作者
Gu, Xiaorong [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Univ Singapore, Asia Res Inst, AS8 07-23,10 Kent Ridge Crescent S, Singapore 119260, Singapore
关键词
China; left-behind children; neoliberal-authoritarianism; media discourse; policy; value of children; MOBILITY; QUALITY; LABOR; NEOLIBERALISM; DISCOURSE; EDUCATION; WOMEN;
D O I
10.1177/0011392120985874
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Existing scholarship on the lives and wellbeing of China's left-behind children often frames the issues as a function of their parents' migration, which leaves a significant gap in discussing the role of the state in shaping the institutional framework that these families operate within, cope or struggle with. Through critically interrogating public discourses based on articles from a mainstream newspaper and policy documents since the early 2000s, this article situates a sociological inquiry into the discursive and institutional framework addressing 'the left-behind children problem' in China within the problematic of the relationship between children, family, and the state. The analysis reveals seemingly 'disingenuous' articulations of left-behind children's value in the mainstream media and official policies. On the one hand, there seems to be a prevailing concern over the welfare of left-behind children which has grave implications for the country's future development. On the other hand, the dominant discourse attributes left-behind children's 'miserable' plight to their 'pathological' family life, which translates into policy efforts to discipline rural migrant families according to a family ideology rooted in urban middle-class experiences. I argue that such inconsistencies should be contextualized in the state's neoliberal-authoritarian governance of the migrant population in the post-reform era, which perpetuates a stereotype of 'the pathological family' to account for left-behind children's disadvantages while evading, hence up until recent years avoiding to redress, the political-economic factors underlying their plight. I conclude the article by ruminating on the theoretical, social and policy implications of this study.
引用
收藏
页码:513 / 538
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Left-behind villages, left-behind children: Migration and the cognitive achievement of rural children in China
    Xie, Wubin
    Sandberg, John
    Huang, Cheng
    Uretsky, Elanah
    [J]. POPULATION SPACE AND PLACE, 2019, 25 (08)
  • [2] Left-behind children and return migration in China
    Demurger, Sylvie
    Xu, Hui
    [J]. IZA JOURNAL OF MIGRATION, 2015, 4
  • [3] Labour Migration and Health of Left-Behind Children in China
    Lei, Lianlian
    Liu, Feng
    Hill, Elaine
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2018, 54 (01): : 93 - 110
  • [4] International Migration and the Education of Left-Behind Children in Fujian, China
    Morooka, Hideki
    Liang, Zai
    [J]. ASIAN AND PACIFIC MIGRATION JOURNAL, 2009, 18 (03) : 345 - 370
  • [5] The impact of parental migration on left-behind children’s vision health in rural China
    Kang Du
    Tianli Yang
    Jin Zhao
    Hongyu Guan
    [J]. BMC Public Health, 23
  • [6] The impact of parental migration on left-behind children's vision health in rural China
    Du, Kang
    Yang, Tianli
    Zhao, Jin
    Guan, Hongyu
    [J]. BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2023, 23 (01)
  • [7] Social spillovers of China's left-behind children in the classroom
    Wang, Haining
    Zhu, Rong
    [J]. LABOUR ECONOMICS, 2021, 69
  • [8] Parent migration and rural preschool children's early academic and social skill trajectories in China: Are left-behind' children really left behind?
    Hu, Bi Ying
    Wu, Huiping
    Winsler, Adam
    Fan, Xitao
    Song, Zhanmei
    [J]. EARLY CHILDHOOD RESEARCH QUARTERLY, 2020, 51 : 317 - 328
  • [9] China's Left-Behind Children: Caretaking Parenting, and Struggles
    Liu, Weidi
    [J]. ASIAN JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY, 2024, 19 (03) : 459 - 461
  • [10] China's left-behind children: Caretaking, parenting, and struggles
    Guo, Kaidong
    [J]. CHILDREN & SOCIETY, 2024,