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1 - Understanding the Lives of Left-Behind Children in Rural China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 August 2020

Rachel Murphy
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

Chapter 1 explains the institutional background to the phenomenon of ‘left-behind’ children in rural China, how these children are represented in the media and scholarly literature, and my unique approach to exploring their lives. Firstly, I focus on the influence of rural-urban migration on family relationships rather than on quantifying the impacts of parents’ migration on different dimensions of the children’s wellbeing, as many previous studies have done. Secondly, I see parental migration as oriented towards educational investment, thereby identifying ‘study’ as central to how the children interpret their parents’ migration and their own obligations to their families. This approach extends extant analyses of children’s experiences of family ‘cultural capital’ accumulation strategies from families where parents and children co-reside to families where parental migration is pivotal to the child raising strategy. Thirdly, I argue that left-behind children are actors in spatially dispersed or multi-local parent-child striving teams rather than the passive recipients of adults’ decisions and migration’s various impacts. I thereby prioritise the children’s perspectives rather than adults’ viewpoints, exploring variation among the children by their gender, age, and academic performance, and by their family’s gendered and generational configurations and class, situated within a wider cultural, institutional and economic context.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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