Africans in China: A Sociocultural Study and Its Implications on Africa-China Relations
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Will the African presence in China continue to increase, and will this have an impact on Africa-China relations? These are key questions that are often posed by any researcher on Africans in China…From what has been seen so far in all of the cities I investigated, I can claim that the African community is here to stay, whether it…. flourishes or not. From now onwards, there will always be not just Africans but African communities in China. Africans have already mingled with Chinese in all of the major cities studied to the extent that there will always be emerging generations of African-Chinese, involving Africans with residency and/or Chinese heritage. There are already many offspring from mixed marriages involving mostly African men and Chinese women, and there are many Africans who are permanent residents in places such as Hong Kong and Macau. If the mainland Chinese immigration system were liberalized and more accommodative, there would be many Africans who are fully-fledged Chinese citizens participating in various sectors of the Chinese economy and public life as athletes, singers, doctors, nurses, and teachers.

These are future destinations of globalization as seen by Bodomo in this text.

The issues that are covered in this book are remarkable, and the lucidity and ease with which the narrative runs is masterly. Bodomo expresses himself and raises issues with simplicity and analytical candor. Mercilessly frank and balanced, expressing himself in a spare and lean way, the author offers a picture of Africans in contemporary China which goes a long way towards giving some clarity to a topical issue that is of particular interest to Africans and Chinese.

Sound and mutually beneficial Afro-Chinese relations are matters of strategic interest to both Africans and Chinese. How these relations develop will partly depend on the lots of the Chinese in Africa and the Africans in China. This book provides an open window onto these realities.

— Professor Kwesi Kwaa Prah,

The Centre for Advanced Studies of African Society (CASAS),

Cape Town