Research

 

You will find a complete range of our monographs, muti-authored and edited works including peer-reviewed, original scholarly research across the social sciences and aligned disciplines. We publish long and short form research and you can browse the complete Bristol University Press and Policy Press archive of over 1,500 titles.

Policy Press also publishes policy reviews and polemic work which aim to challenge policy and practice in certain fields. These books have a practitioner in mind and are practical, accessible in style, as well as being academically sound and referenced.
 

Books: Research

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In conclusion, this book demonstrates the intimate consequences of social inequalities: how the multi-layered inequalities regarding the rural–urban divide, ethnicity and gender have a profound impact on people’s emotions, sense of self, and their relationships with significant others. At the same time, it seeks to move beyond merely exploring the intimate consequences of inequalities, and further asks how we could use these intimate negotiations as a means to understand social inequalities – an approach I call ‘intimacy as a lens’. It means starting from the intimate realm and working from there to understand broader social inequalities. As this book demonstrates, the lens of intimacy provides valuable insights that otherwise tend to be overlooked, and illuminates how power and inequalities work in contemporary China. In a way, this book provides a convincing answer to the question of what it means to say that ‘the personal is political’, and more importantly, illuminates how we can understand ‘the political’ better if we take ‘the personal’ seriously.

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Ethnic performers encounter ethnicity through everyday work and migration, yet they are ambivalent over whether they are ‘authentic’ ethnic minorities. Their ambivalence provides a valuable starting point for understanding ethnicity as something people do rather than who they are, and also for emphasizing the existence of multi-layered ‘ethnic scripts’, that is, the social and cultural repertoires which deeply shape people’s understanding of and ways of ‘doing ethnicity’. In order to achieve ‘valuable personhood’, performers work on their ethnic selves in ways which accord with state and market versions of ethnic scripts. Also, ethnic scripts become part of the ‘feeling rules’ which shape how performers manage their emotions in order to perform the happy, worry-free demeanor of ethnic minorities. Ethnic scripts also tend to sexualize minority women. This chapter highlights the ways that ethnic scripts are closely related to migrant performers’ emotions and sense of self, and the fact that ethnic scripts are inherently gendered.

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This chapter provides a detailed account of what ethnic performance is like at the three field sites. Ethnic performance is a form of interactive service work through which minority, rural, feminized performers encounter Han, urban, mostly male customers in a physically proximate manner, which renders their social distance even more significant. After considering different sociological frameworks, this chapter argues that ethnic performance could be best theorized as a site of encounters where performers have to constantly encounter multiple bordering processes in relation to the rural–urban divide, ethnicity, and gender. The need to constantly encounter borders through everyday work and migration has an intimate and emotional consequence for performers. It shapes their entitlement to respect and motivates them to achieve a ‘modern self’ through off-work entertainment and consumption. These intimate encounters with borders also point to the need to see work and personal life as closely related and mutually constitutive.

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The lens of intimacy reveals how migrant performers’ work and lives are governed by the gendered aspects of bordering. Performers undertake sexualized labour because of the ethnic scripts, which readily sexualize ethnic minority women, and the need to pamper guests and create intimacy in the banquets. Female performers who engage in this sexualized labour need to constantly defend their virtuous reputations, yet their relationships with significant others are overshadowed. In the local contexts where promoting ethnic culture is closely related to economic development, female performers refer to this aspect of ethnic scripts to frame ethnic performance as ‘promoting ethnic culture’. In this way, they manage to legitimize and justify doing sexualized labour, demonstrating their agency. By looking broadly at intimacy as negotiated within work as well as ‘private’ relationships, intimacy as a lens reveals how gender is negotiated in close association with ethnicity and rural–urban inequalities.

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Experiences of Ethnic Performers in Southwest China
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This book explores the experiences of ethnic performers in a small Chinese city, aiming to better understand their work and migration journeys. Their unique position as service workers who have migrated within the same province provides valuable insights into the intersection of social inequalities related to the rural-urban divide, ethnicity and gender in contemporary China. Introducing the concept of ‘intimacy as a lens’, the author examines intimate negotiations involving emotions, sense of self and relationships as a way of understanding wider social inequalities.

Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, the book reveals the bordering mechanisms encountered by performers in their work as they navigate between rural and urban environments, as well as between ethnic minority and Han identities. Emphasising the intimate and personal nature of these encounters, the book argues that they can help inform understanding of broader social issues.

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Emotions are central to understanding the ways in which migrant performers experience and negotiate the rural–urban borders, most notably in relation to the hukou system in China. While migrants contend with an opaque migration regime, emotional reflexivity plays a crucial role in shaping their hukou-transfer decision. The broader emotional regime at the societal level profoundly shapes informants’ emotional reflexivity. In line with the state’s emphasis on happiness, positive energy, as well as ‘the China Dream’, migrants tend to use emotional management to frame their ‘negative emotions’ into ‘positive’ ones. The different meanings attached to the rural and the urban play a significant role in shaping informants’ personhood, as they seek to embrace migration in order to achieve a modern and valuable self. Yet, following migration, performers continue to experience rural–urban bordering through everyday work in intimate and emotional ways, which consolidate rather than alleviate their marginalization.

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Ethnic performers are rural–urban migrants who perform ethnic songs and dances at different venues such as restaurants and tourist sites. While performers’ representations are prevalent in many cultural spheres in China, their voices tend to be silenced. This chapter demonstrates how researching ethnic performers’ experiences bridges important gaps in research on rural–urban migration in China, as it focuses on the less-understood experiences of ethnic minority migrants who undertake service work, and those who move from rural areas to small- or medium-sized cities within a province. It also sets up the theoretical framework for the book, that is, the concepts of ‘intimacy as a lens’ and ‘border encounters’, and demonstrates how studying migration and ethnicity from the perspective of emotion, intimacy, and the personal sheds new light on how power and inequality operate in contemporary China. This chapter outlines the research questions, with a brief methodological overview, and provides an outline of the chapters to follow.

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This chapter brings together all the main arguments and findings discussed throughout the key chapters, highlighting the key constituents and the nature of the ‘belonging-assemblage’ of unaccompanied young people living under the constraints of the UK asylum and immigration structures. Reiterating the key findings and arguments of previous chapters, it emphasizes the main argument of the book, which is that unaccompanied migrants’ belonging is also understood as an ‘assemblage’, taking place in-between and in the middle and is always in the making; therefore, it is nomadic and rhizomatic in its nature and exists in its potentiality and actuality.

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This chapter introduces the main conceptual and theoretical resources of the book after giving an in-depth, critical appraisal of the existing conceptual literature on belonging, exposing its limitations in understanding the complexity and multiplicity of the notion of belonging in general and the belonging of unaccompanied migrants more specifically. It discusses in detail Deleuze and Guattari’s theoretical terms of assemblage, molar, molecular and nomadic lines alongside others and shows their value in developing the concept of belonging and in our understanding of the belonging of unaccompanied young people in precarious positions. This chapter argues the case for a new conceptual understanding of belonging that is capable of capturing the shifts, multiplicities, complexities and paradoxes in experiencing and conceiving belonging in migration in relation to those in precarious positions.

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This chapter sets the scene for and gives context to an in-depth, theoretically informed study of the belonging of unaccompanied young people seeking asylum in the UK. It begins by introducing the story of displacement, migration and belonging of one of the participants. The participant’s accounts of the challenges of migrating to and resettling in the UK provide an anchor into which the analysis of the main findings are woven in the coming chapters.

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