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Asian Student Migrations and Transformative Outcomes

Immigrant Appreciation Day - Closing Keynote

Location

Information Technology/Engineering : 104

Date & Time

May 1, 2024, 4:00 pm5:00 pm

Description


Light refreshments will be served. Please RSVP here.

Asian Student Migrations and the Transformative Outcomes of Higher Education Institutions

Madeline Hsu, Professor of History and Director of the Center for Global Migration Studies, University of Maryland, College Park

Asian student migrations reveal most clearly the stark contradictions between the restrictive and selective priorities of immigration regulation. Over the past two centuries of intensification both of globalization and nation-state regulation of migration, the continued privileging of Asian student mobilities, employment, and settlements underscore that this category of migrants is multilaterally regarded as beneficial and meriting legal protections and support. Education and its pursuit produce persons with enhanced capacities for cross-cultural exchanges and negotiations and certified enhanced skills and expertise, whose circulations bolster international relationships and spread influence among societies partnered through student exchanges.  For these reasons, Asian educational migrants constitute revealing exceptions to the late nineteenth-century hardening of border security regimes around the world which prioritized racial difference and national origins for exclusion and greater restriction, particularly targeting Asian persons.  Abundant scholarship has explored the international emergence of ideologies and institutions for immigration restriction constructed with the goals of segregating Asians.   Equally foundational, however, has been the parallel and ongoing recruitment of Asian students as agents who may foster international influence but also for their eventual employment and resettlement as valued knowledge workers.  Status as educational migrants contravened the racialization of Asians as inassimilable, inferior others. Asian student migrations thus underscore the necessity of exploring migration and migration regulation along a fuller spectrum, not just of restriction of racialized undesirables, but also of recruitment of valued knowledge migrants who enjoy encouragement and legal protections and access to legal migration. 

Biography: Madeline Hsu is the director of the center and professor of history and Affiliate Faculty with the Asian American Studies Program. Her research interests include migration studies, Asian and Asian American studies, and immigration, Chinese, and American history. She has three books: Dreaming of Gold, Dreaming of Home: Transnationalism and Migration Between the United States and South China, 1882-1943 (Stanford University Press, 2000), The Good Immigrants:  How the Yellow Peril Became the Model Minority (Princeton University Press, 2015), and Asian American History: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2016).