Periodic Reporting for period 1 - TRACMI (Trading Chinese Migrants: Networks of Human Trafficking in Treaty-Port China (1830-1930s))
Período documentado: 2022-10-01 hasta 2024-09-30
This project’s work has aimed towards the following research objectives (RO):
RO1. To unveil how the private sector and colonial states used legal, economic and political mechanisms to either promote or obstruct the commodification of Chinese labour and forced mobility.
RO2. To shed light on how transnational human-trafficking networks operated, and how they determined the circulation and exploitation of Chinese victims of human trade, using the primary sources gathered.
RO3. To problematize current conceptualizations about the coolie trade, slavery, and Chinese emigration by examining the interconnection and parallelisms between the trafficking of infants, women, and male labourers.
RO4. To uncover and make available unpublished primary sources regarding Sino-foreign relations, the organization of the trade of Chinese workers, women, and children in China, and their exploitation overseas.
- Studied the literature on Chinese indentured labour and human trafficking, and on invisibilization in labour history
- Undertook international and multilingual archival research in Spain, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany
- Received training in the use of digital tools
- Organized an international conference to enhance the transfer of knowledge to the host and secondment institutions and successfully obtained third-party funding to fund the conference.
- Directed and edited an open access edited volume on invisibilization in Asian modern history
- Applied to more than 8 academic positions and major grants, and was shortlisted to a tenure track post in the French National Center for Scientific Research
- Successfully obtained a Barbro Klein Fellowship at the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study
- Published a research article at a peer reviewed top journal in her field
- Submitted a book proposal for a monograph to a highly prestigious academic press. The researcher will develop the book in the incoming months
- Organized two double panels at the Fourteenth and Fifteenth editions of the European Social Science History Conference
- Presented research results at more than 15 international academic venues and institutions
- To transfer knowledge to graduate and undergraduate students, the researcher designed and taught the course International labour emigration and human trafficking in treaty-port China (19th-20th century)
- Widened her network and joined various international networks and research groups
- Received language training to improve her research and communication abilities in French and Chinese
Aside from developing these theories, arguments and interventions in various publications, the project has also focused on the gathering of data; on setting up a preliminary data collection; and presenting the preliminary results via lectures, seminars, talks and conferences, which allowed the researcher to obtain feedback. As for communication and outreach, the researcher was interviewed for the New Books Network (incoming), will also feature in the podcast SCAS talks, is planning to disseminate the results in a newspaper article, and has become an active participant of two international networks dedicated to the study of labour history and of Chinese migration.