Through mutual recognition and exchange, social capital has the potential, therefore, to provide individuals with a variety of resources, including, as existing research has shown (e.g., Granovetter, 1973; Coleman, 1988; Garner, 1988), information on schools, access to jobs, and other significant opportunities facilitating the reproduction of social status (see Lin, 2001 for an overview of work on social capital).
Migration and Cultural Capital in the Chinese Diaspora
For middle-class Chinese families, the accumulation of cultural capital frequently includes the practice of sending children overseas for education. The overseas education offers more than a valuable academic credential, however–it is an essential part of what Mitchell (1997b, p. 230) described as the ‘self fashioning’ of Chinese elites. It also provides embodied cultural capital, inculcating children into the mores of a cosmopolitan and hypermobile middle-class lifestyle (Mitchell, 1997a; Ong & Nonini, 1997).
Integral to these practices of capital accumulation, Chinese migration is frequently transnational in nature.