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ID153637
Title ProperVoid in public discourse and the limitations of the equal education campaign in Beijing
LanguageENG
AuthorZhou, Mujun
Summary / Abstract (Note)Because of the huge impact of the hukou system (户口制度) on the allocation of educational resources in China, migrant children’s access to schools has long been circumscribed. Since 2009, a group of migrant parents in Beijing has been involved in a movement demanding their children’s right to sit for the college entrance exam in the city. Using ethnographic methods, this article reviews how the idea of equal education was contested among four groups: (1) liberal intellectuals as the leaders of the movement; (2) middle-class migrant parents as the major activists; (3) working-class migrant parents as the subjects for mobilization; and (4) participants in counter-movements. Despite the involvement of liberal intellectuals that has helped the movement make an inclusive claim, the movement has largely remained parochial, and to some extent it even served to reinforce inequality in China’s education system. I use the equal education movement as a case to reflect upon the ‘boundary pushing’ approach in studies on China’s public sphere, and contend that researchers should pay more attention to the internal power dynamics of social movement.
`In' analytical NoteChina Information Vol. 31, No.2; Jul 2017: p.176-194
Journal SourceChina Information 2017-08 31, 2
Key WordsSocial Movement ;  Public Sphere ;  Migrant Children ;  Public Discourse ;  Education Inequality