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Tackling rural-urban inequalities through educational mobilities : rural-origin Chinese academics from impoverished backgrounds navigating higher education.

Xu, Cora Lingling (2020) 'Tackling rural-urban inequalities through educational mobilities : rural-origin Chinese academics from impoverished backgrounds navigating higher education.', Policy reviews in Higher Education., 4 (2). pp. 179-202.

Abstract

Existing scholarship on marginalised academics is mostly western-based and concerned with inequalities caused by class, gender and/or racial and ethnic differences. This article adds to this literature by highlighting how inequalities caused by the urban-rural divide in China adversely impact on the academic trajectories of rural-origin academics from impoverished backgrounds. To mitigate such inequalities, the 26 interviewed academics drew on their academic capital to achieve institutional and geographic mobilities, both within and beyond China. Such educational mobilities further allowed these scholars to convert into and accumulate economic, social, cultural and symbolic capitals (after Bourdieu). Importantly, their rural-origins and disadvantaged positioning had cultivated in them a productive habitus that is characterised by hard work, perseverance and self-discipline. Such a habitus played a pivotal role in orchestrating their academic ascension and upward social mobility. However, despite these successes, this article also reveals these academics’ perennial financial struggles in lifting their rural-based families out of poverty, and the exclusive nature of educational mobilities, which are manifestations of systemic structural inequalities caused by urban-biased policies.

Item Type:Article
Full text:(AM) Accepted Manuscript
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Status:Peer-reviewed
Publisher Web site:https://doi.org/10.1080/23322969.2020.1783697
Publisher statement:This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Policy reviews in Higher Education on 22 June 2020 available online: http://www.tandfonline.com//10.1080/23322969.2020.1783697
Date accepted:08 June 2020
Date deposited:27 August 2020
Date of first online publication:22 June 2020
Date first made open access:22 December 2021

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