“Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis

To reverse “brain drain”, the Chinese governments have deployed various mechanisms, including preferential policies, to recruit ethnic Chinese individuals from abroad who are considered top talent urgently needed in China. This study looks at how Chinese overseas recruitment policies contribute to t...

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Main Author: Mo, Yanxian
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/57885
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-578852018-01-05T17:28:59Z “Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis Mo, Yanxian To reverse “brain drain”, the Chinese governments have deployed various mechanisms, including preferential policies, to recruit ethnic Chinese individuals from abroad who are considered top talent urgently needed in China. This study looks at how Chinese overseas recruitment policies contribute to the construction of overseas talent as a distinguished social group, thereby entrenching stratification in the Chinese society. Theoretically, the thesis is informed by Bourdieu’s theory of social class and by Levinson et al.’s perspectives on policy function. The main focus is the Thousand Talent Plan (TTP), which is the China’s most influential policy for recruiting top-notch talent from abroad. My study starts with a historical overview of talent policies in China, giving special attention to the social and economic context of the changes. Critical discourse analysis is then employed as a methodological approach to examine how such policies ideologically differentiate the “best from the rest.” I argue that Chinese overseas recruitment policies have the formative power to construct and impose a legitimate vision of “top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group: a minority privileged with cultural capital, advantageous economic capital, privileged social capital, and honourable symbolic capital. Study limitations and implications for policy and practice are discussed. Education, Faculty of Educational Studies (EDST), Department of Graduate 2016-04-26T17:23:35Z 2016-04-27T02:02:44 2016 2016-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/57885 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description To reverse “brain drain”, the Chinese governments have deployed various mechanisms, including preferential policies, to recruit ethnic Chinese individuals from abroad who are considered top talent urgently needed in China. This study looks at how Chinese overseas recruitment policies contribute to the construction of overseas talent as a distinguished social group, thereby entrenching stratification in the Chinese society. Theoretically, the thesis is informed by Bourdieu’s theory of social class and by Levinson et al.’s perspectives on policy function. The main focus is the Thousand Talent Plan (TTP), which is the China’s most influential policy for recruiting top-notch talent from abroad. My study starts with a historical overview of talent policies in China, giving special attention to the social and economic context of the changes. Critical discourse analysis is then employed as a methodological approach to examine how such policies ideologically differentiate the “best from the rest.” I argue that Chinese overseas recruitment policies have the formative power to construct and impose a legitimate vision of “top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group: a minority privileged with cultural capital, advantageous economic capital, privileged social capital, and honourable symbolic capital. Study limitations and implications for policy and practice are discussed. === Education, Faculty of === Educational Studies (EDST), Department of === Graduate
author Mo, Yanxian
spellingShingle Mo, Yanxian
“Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis
author_facet Mo, Yanxian
author_sort Mo, Yanxian
title “Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis
title_short “Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis
title_full “Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis
title_fullStr “Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis
title_full_unstemmed “Top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis
title_sort “top” overseas talent as a distinguished social group : a policy study using critical discourse analysis
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/57885
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