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Accepted Paper:

Chinese Übermensches: Mobility Capital and the Entrepreneurial Experiences of Young Privileged Chinese Migrants  
Wenfu Zhang (Global Sustainable Development, University of Warwick)

Paper short abstract:

This study explores why privileged young Chinese emigrate, using entrepreneurship to navigate a "risk society" marked by reduced freedoms and intense competition. By leveraging UK residency and Chinese nationality, they build 'mobility capital' for strategic global movement.

Paper long abstract:

This study examines why young, privileged Chinese individuals emigrate, how they sustain fluid, ongoing movement, and the life goals through migrant entrepreneurship. Through interviews with 30 young Chinese migrant entrepreneurs in the UK, this study reveals that they migrate primarily to escape an increasingly "risk society" (Beck, 1992), characterized by reduced social and personal freedoms, a hostile business environment, and hyper-competition within professional and entrepreneurial sectors in the PRC. In this context, elite-oriented immigration policies of Northern countries align with these migrants' goals, creating a duality of 'neoliberalism as exception' and 'exceptions to neoliberalism' (Ong, 2006), which facilitates selective entry for young, privileged Chinese. Intriguingly, even within the perceived context of an increasingly 'risk society,' young, privileged migrants are hesitant to relinquish their Chinese nationality, despite having diligently obtained UK residency. This choice reflects a deliberate strategy to cultivate 'mobility capital' (Moret, 2017). A Northern country's residency offers mobility to exit China when “risks” emerge, while Chinese nationality enables a strategic return when advantageous. This study contributes to the literature on how young, privileged Chinese individuals from the not-so-distant ‘Deng Xiaoping Era’ (Vogel 2011) view China’s ongoing “New Era” (Shirk 2018) as shaping their future aspirations with uncertainty; it examines how revenue-driven immigration controls in postcolonial Northern countries impact Southern elites by enabling them to project their domestic inequality issues onto a global scale through the use of mobility capital. In this study, I term these young Chinese elites "Chinese Übermensches," an unparalleled phenomenon in Chinese migration history.

Panel P52
Diasporic mediation in a deglobalizing world