At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail Sector
This article examines the relationship between the economic activities of Chinese migrants in the wholesale and retail sector in Lesotho, and the larger structural framework. More specifically, it investigates this relationship with reference to the general debate on Chinese migrants in Africa. Thes...
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Online Access: | http://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/afsp/article/view/677 |
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doaj-57882e0a756b4a1c87b8c5a2e5c1e23c2020-11-25T03:43:38ZengSAGE PublishingAfrica Spectrum1868-68692013-01-014838597At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail SectorSarah Hanisch0University of ViennaThis article examines the relationship between the economic activities of Chinese migrants in the wholesale and retail sector in Lesotho, and the larger structural framework. More specifically, it investigates this relationship with reference to the general debate on Chinese migrants in Africa. These themes locate Chinese migrants at the margins of the economy, assume some Chinese exceptionalism, and imply a kind of neocolonialism. The article demonstrates that Chinese migrants are, in fact, not operating at the margins of the economy, but have become a vital element of Lesotho’s wholesale and retail sector. The analysis of the structural framework indicates that the economic activities of Chinese migrants are a reflection of existing structural constraints and opportunities rather than Chinese exceptionalism or neocolonialism. This in turn implies that future research would benefit from placing the interplay of Chinese migrants and the larger structural framework in respective African countries at the centre of analysis.http://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/afsp/article/view/677area studies, social sciencesmigrants, Chinese, wholesale trade, retail trade300, 305, 320, 325, 380Lesotho1960-present |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sarah Hanisch |
spellingShingle |
Sarah Hanisch At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail Sector Africa Spectrum area studies, social sciences migrants, Chinese, wholesale trade, retail trade 300, 305, 320, 325, 380 Lesotho 1960-present |
author_facet |
Sarah Hanisch |
author_sort |
Sarah Hanisch |
title |
At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail Sector |
title_short |
At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail Sector |
title_full |
At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail Sector |
title_fullStr |
At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail Sector |
title_full_unstemmed |
At the Margins of the Economy? Chinese Migrants in Lesotho’s Wholesale and Retail Sector |
title_sort |
at the margins of the economy? chinese migrants in lesotho’s wholesale and retail sector |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
Africa Spectrum |
issn |
1868-6869 |
publishDate |
2013-01-01 |
description |
This article examines the relationship between the economic activities of Chinese migrants in the wholesale and retail sector in Lesotho, and the larger structural framework. More specifically, it investigates this relationship with reference to the general debate on Chinese migrants in Africa. These themes locate Chinese migrants at the margins of the economy, assume some Chinese exceptionalism, and imply a kind of neocolonialism. The article demonstrates that Chinese migrants are, in fact, not operating at the margins of the economy, but have become a vital element of Lesotho’s wholesale and retail sector. The analysis of the structural framework indicates that the economic activities of Chinese migrants are a reflection of existing structural constraints and opportunities rather than Chinese exceptionalism or neocolonialism. This in turn implies that future research would benefit from placing the interplay of Chinese migrants and the larger structural framework in respective African countries at the centre of analysis. |
topic |
area studies, social sciences migrants, Chinese, wholesale trade, retail trade 300, 305, 320, 325, 380 Lesotho 1960-present |
url |
http://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/afsp/article/view/677 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT sarahhanisch atthemarginsoftheeconomychinesemigrantsinlesothoswholesaleandretailsector |
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