Muslim Uyghur Students in a Chinese Boarding School

Social Recapitalization as a Response to Ethnic Integration

By (author) Yangbin Chen

Hardback - £93.00

Publication date:

29 May 2008

Length of book:

230 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

ISBN-13: 9780739121122

One of the most controversial policies in Chinese minority education concerns the so-called inland ethnic minority schools or classes in Han inhabited areas in China. Since 2000, boarding Xinjiang Classes have been established in the eastern cities of China for high school students from the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, in order to educate young Uyghur and other ethnic minority students through the national curricula.

Although the Xinjiang Classes are supposed to promote ethnic integration between the Muslim Uyghur minority and the Han majority, there often remains a gap between the stated policy goal and its actual implementation. Guided by the theoretical framework of social capital analysis, this book therefore examines how Uyghur students in the Xinjiang Classes respond to the school goal of ethnic integration.

Chen conceptualizes the process of Uyghur students' responses to the school goal of ethnic integration as social recapitalization. While their former social capital from families or communities in Xinjiang is constrained in the boarding school, Uyghur youths are able to develop independent and new social capital to facilitate their schooling. Nonetheless, they lack "bridging social capital," which makes the goal of ethnic integration more difficult to achieve.
This is a nuanced study of Muslim Uyghur students in Chinese boarding schools in China. It offers a full and fair overview of the development of Xinjiang Classes as a state policy of ethnic integration while documenting the role of agency on the part of Uyghur students in their active resistance to cultural subjugation and their proactive effort to build social networks in school. The study illuminates the process of social recapitalization benefiting minority schooling, pushes the reader to re-think the paradox of assimilation and ethnicization, and calls for a public policy of multicultural education.