Summary information

Study title

Mental Health, Migration and the Chinese Mega-City, 2016-2019

Creator

Manning, N, King's College London

Study number / PID

854786 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-854786 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

The data has been generated by ethnographic observations, interviews and interactions with migrant workers in two sites in Shanghai in 2017/2018: Songjiang District on the south-western outskirts, and the inner-city Huangpu District, in proximity to some of the city’s most famous tourist attractions, such as the Bund or Nanjing Road. Ethnography, with its focus on everyday experience, can yield significant insights into understanding migrant mental health in contexts where signs of severe mental distress remain largely imperceptible, and more generally, into how stresses and strains are lived through the spaces, times and affective atmospheres of the city. Migrant ethnography can help us reconsider the oft-made connection between everyday stress and mental ill health. In this research, drawing on field evidence in central and peripheral Shanghai, we highlight the importance of attending to the forms of spatial and temporal agency through which migrants actively manage the ways in which the city affects their subjectivity. These everyday subjective practices serve to problematize the very concept of ‘mental health’, enabling us to engage in a critical dialogue with sociological and epidemiological research that assesses migrant mental health states through the lens of the vulnerability or resilience of this social group, often reducing citiness to a series of environmental ‘stressors’.We have known, since at least the early twentieth century, that there is an association between living in a city and being diagnosed with a mental illness. But questions around the specificity of relationship between urban life and have continued well into the twenty-first century. We still don't know, for example, exactly why mental illness clusters in cities; we don't know how it relates to experiences of urban poverty, deprivation, overcrowding, social exclusion, and racism; and we don't know the precise biological and sociological mechanisms that turn difficult urban lives into...
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/01/2016 - 28/02/2019

Country

People's Republic of China

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual
Organization
Family: Household family
Household
Housing Unit

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Text

Data collection mode

This research used ethnography. This involved qualitative observations, interviews and interactions with migrant workers who lived and worked on Tongli Road, Songjiang District, and with migrant workers who worked or used public facilities (bookshops, libraries etc) in the inner-city Huangpu District.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/N010892/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2021

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available