Childhood
Volume 21, Issue 1, 2014, Pages 39-55
Constructing childhood at the boundaries of the nation: Chinese adoptee and refugee cases in Canada (Article)
Ballucci D. ,
Dorow S.*
-
a
University of New Brunswick, Canada
-
b
University of Alberta, Canada
Abstract
This article analyzes and compares two instances of national border crossing that involve decisions about children from China: children whose Canadian relatives have applied to adopt them, and unaccompanied children who seek refugee status. Discourse analysis of interviews, hearings, and official documents in the two cases demonstrates how the 'innocence' and 'best interests' of children are produced through three specific forms of knowledge: age, generational ordering, and most significantly, cultural readings of Chinese kinship. By examining the two cases of relative adoption and unaccompanied refugee claimants next to each other, the article reveals some of the institutional discourses through which childhood is constructed in the socio-legal discretionary power over immigration. The study also considers how the flexible deployment of conceptualizations of childhood, especially imaginaries of culturally 'other' kinship and childhood, serve the production of the nation-state. © The Author(s) 2013.
Author Keywords
Index Keywords
[No Keywords available]
Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84893253406&doi=10.1177%2f0907568213482496&partnerID=40&md5=8944d28907336e3a870a0afd047c5d3a
DOI: 10.1177/0907568213482496
ISSN: 09075682
Cited by: 3
Original Language: English