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Erschienen in: Journal of Chinese Political Science 4/2016

15.10.2016 | RESEARCH ARTICLE

Citizenship Institutions in Chinese Peasant-Workers’ Everyday Life: Toward a Theory of Citizenship Practice

verfasst von: Fayin Xu

Erschienen in: Journal of Chinese Political Science | Ausgabe 4/2016

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Abstract

Because of the close relationship between the existence of Chinese peasant workers and state policies, Chinese peasant workers’ citizenship has long been a central problem in the research on this group of people. In previous research, institutional analyses didn’t empirically examine the operation of citizenship, while the empirical investigation of citizen resistance failed to examine the influence of citizenship institutions on peasant workers’ everyday practice. Data from in-depth interviews indicate that relevant citizenship institutions and their changes constitute a part of the peasant-worker labor regime in China, which means that their citizenship has contributed to the long-term existence and the increasing number of this group of workers. First, the citizenship institutions related to peasant workers include differential citizenship, partial citizenship, passive citizenship, and segmented citizenship. Second, these citizenship institutions have shaped their double identities of rural residents and urban guests, which have influenced their motivations and attitudes toward their peasant-worker lifestyle. Finally, the effects of citizenship institutions on peasant workers’ identity, motivation and attitudes are a product of the market logic, which has made them commodify their citizenship. These findings imply a theory of citizenship practice and contribute to the understanding of the phenomenon of Chinese peasant workers.

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Fußnoten
1
Chinese peasant workers are also called farmer-workers, migrant workers, and rural-urban migrant labor. This article adopts the term “peasant worker” in order to emphasize the unique characteristics of these workers in China. The term “peasant worker” focuses more on these workers’ social status as peasant than the term “farmer worker,” which emphasizes their occupational feature. This term is also more specific than the term “migrant worker.”
 
2
As this study implies, this may be because social rights and benefits are passive citizenship, which will help maintain social stability and avoid social risks. For example, the passive citizenship of peasant workers in cities have made them tend to accept the peasant-worker lifestyle.
 
3
This is also why the discourse of citizenship employed by peasant workers has been emphasized in studies on citizen resistance.
 
4
For those with injury insurance, that insurance is compulsory and even paid by employers.
 
5
The meaning of “becoming urban residents” changes with peasant workers’ life conditions. The better is a peasant worker’s life condition, the higher is the standard of “becoming a urban resident.”
 
6
Though peasant-workers are usually defined as all migrants from the countryside to cities regardless of what they are doing, this study only focuses on those migrants who earn their living through selling their labor power.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Citizenship Institutions in Chinese Peasant-Workers’ Everyday Life: Toward a Theory of Citizenship Practice
verfasst von
Fayin Xu
Publikationsdatum
15.10.2016
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Journal of Chinese Political Science / Ausgabe 4/2016
Print ISSN: 1080-6954
Elektronische ISSN: 1874-6357
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11366-016-9437-8

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