The Inclusion Paradox: Why Inclusive Space Excludes Migrant Children, and Vice Versa

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2024-01-01

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Abstract

What characteristics of space predict exclusive policies? Intuitively, socioeconomically exclusive spaces–such as wealthy urban centers in China–would also be exclusive in welfare provision. Drawing from cross-district comparisons within a Chinese metropolis, we identify a counterintuitive pattern where the urban center had easier migrant school access policies than the urban fringe. This pattern has existed in both the 2010s and 2020s, surviving a major school admissions policy reform. We call this pattern the inclusion paradox. The inclusion paradox can be attributed to two causes: a compartmentalization of school access along urban district boundaries, and a tendency of fringe districts to carry more migrant population with less fiscal capacity. As a result of the inclusion paradox, migrant children were more likely excluded from school access precisely where they were more likely to live. The inclusion paradox implies that policy exclusion and spatial exclusion substitute each other, a pattern that brings migrant school access in China in conversation with unequal school access in other contexts.

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10.1080/10611932.2024.2385282

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Zhu, F, and J Xue (2024). The Inclusion Paradox: Why Inclusive Space Excludes Migrant Children, and Vice Versa. Chinese Education and Society, 57(1-2). pp. 121–140. 10.1080/10611932.2024.2385282 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34285.

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Zhu

Fangsheng Zhu

Assistant Professor of Sociology at Duke Kunshan University

Fangsheng uses mixed methods to study the social, political, and technological contexts of education. His current research investigates questions such as: Why are education inequality and intensity so difficult to reduce, even under a strong state? How do new forms of education emerge amid shifts in culture and technology? 


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