Divergent Governance over African Communities in Two Chinese Cities. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 2023. (solo author, advance online)
This article examines the different approaches to governing sub-Saharan African traders in urban China due to varying urban growth strategies. Over the past two decades, an increasing number of African migrants have settled in Chinese cities, primarily Guangzhou and Yiwu, to run businesses focused on exports. However, they have been treated differently by local governments. The Guangzhou government's goal of attaining global city status has resulted in the mobilization of racial ideologies to create a socio-spatial hierarchy that marginalizes Africans, categorizing them as “undesirable” for the globalizing city and its “advanced” industries. Conversely, the Yiwu government's objective of becoming an international trading hub for Global South markets has led to a greater emphasis on African communities and a heightened sensitivity towards racial dynamics. This comparative analysis highlights how a city's position in the global economy and its corresponding growth strategies shape its interactions with migrant populations.
Cross-cultural Trading Network: A Case Study of African Traders in Yiwu. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. Special Issue (solo author, under review)
This article delves into the structural conditions and micro-dynamics that have shaped the cross-racial trading networks between Chinese suppliers and African traders in China, who come from distinctly different cultural backgrounds. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted at Yiwu, a prominent trading hub in China attracting a significant number of African traders, the study reveals that, at the macro level, institutional arrangements and market conditions cultivate an interdependent relationship between traders and suppliers. On the micro level, the marketplace serves as a platform for everyday encounters, enabling negotiation and the establishment of credibility. Consequently, the Yiwu market witnesses the emergence of a hybrid of cultural and linguistic practices among market actors. This article moves beyond migrant entrepreneurship and market embeddedness literature, advocating for the recognition of the market as an inherent social site fostering the formation of new social relations.
Chinese labor workers and African traders packaging products for shipping in a warehouse in China (photo by author)