Tag Archives: China

Accidents of equity and the aesthetics of Chinese offshore incorporation

By Bill Maurer and Sylvia J. Martin
British Virgin Islands Financial Services Commission float at the 2008 Emancipation Festival.

The British Virgin Islands is second only to Hong Kong as a source for foreign investment into China. Over the past two decades or so, Chinese entrepreneurs have demonstrated a preference for incorporating in the offshore finance centers of the Caribbean. Chinese offshore structures are different from earlier uses of the offshore in their unique and seemingly transparent aesthetic form. We show how equity—a legal argument and tradition that moderates the letter of the law—and these structures mutually engage one another through spatiotemporal reference and framing. We argue that this engagement is accidental, a coincidence of aesthetic form rather than an emergent phenomenon of any larger process or the product of a plan. It is also not a contingent articulation of compatible elements from the corporate and legal domains. In exploring the aesthetics of Chinese offshore incorporation and court cases that invoke equity, we argue that the accidental discovery of equity can reorient certain analytical conceits about capital and how we can know it.

Posted in Articles - Volume 39 Issue 3 (August 2012), Volume 39, Issue 3 (August 2012) | Also tagged , , , , , , | Comments closed

“Dividing the Poor”: State governance of differential impoverishment in northeast China

By Mun Young Cho

How is poverty being managed in China when pauperization of some has become an unavoidable condition of the market economy and when the poor, nevertheless, attempt to make legitimate claims that cannot be overlooked by the developmental and officially socialist state? In this article, I examine “dividing the poor” as a project of governing urban laid-off workers and rural migrants in postreform China. This project has been made possible through a porous array of governmental intersections that include the temporality of state policies, disjunctive layers of state actions, and the positionality of state agents.

Posted in Articles - Volume 39, Issue 1 (February 2012), Volume 39, Issue 1 (February 2012) | Also tagged , , , | Comments closed