TY - JOUR
T1 - Homeownership habitus and residential practice of highly-skilled Chinese migrants in the Netherlands
AU - He, Qiong
AU - Colic-Peisker, Val
N1 - Funding: This paper comes out of a project funded by a seed grant from the Centre for Urban Studies at the University of Amsterdam titled ‘Residential integration of immigrants: evidence from residential practice of highly-skilled Chinese in the Netherlands’ (2022).
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - This paper proposes a “homeownership habitus” concept to understand the residential practice of highly-skilled young Chinese migrants in the Netherlands. Using 41 interviews, we show how and why they typically become homeowners soon after securing stable employment. Even without planning to stay in the Netherlands long-term, buying properties was taken for granted, sanctioned by the Chinese value framework whereby homeownership is not only a status-marker and rational economic choice, but integral to adulthood transitions. Homeownership was often enabled by familial intergenerational support, also functioning as a transnational investment strategy. Such rapid tenure transition included spatial strategies to buy in “good” suburban locations or more affordable lower-reputation localities. The historic city centres of Amsterdam and Utrecht were deemed expensive and housing stock old, while Rotterdam’s modern city centre was popular among them. This paper contributes to literature on highly-skilled Chinese in Western cities, residential practice of migrants and transnational materialization of habitus across fields.
AB - This paper proposes a “homeownership habitus” concept to understand the residential practice of highly-skilled young Chinese migrants in the Netherlands. Using 41 interviews, we show how and why they typically become homeowners soon after securing stable employment. Even without planning to stay in the Netherlands long-term, buying properties was taken for granted, sanctioned by the Chinese value framework whereby homeownership is not only a status-marker and rational economic choice, but integral to adulthood transitions. Homeownership was often enabled by familial intergenerational support, also functioning as a transnational investment strategy. Such rapid tenure transition included spatial strategies to buy in “good” suburban locations or more affordable lower-reputation localities. The historic city centres of Amsterdam and Utrecht were deemed expensive and housing stock old, while Rotterdam’s modern city centre was popular among them. This paper contributes to literature on highly-skilled Chinese in Western cities, residential practice of migrants and transnational materialization of habitus across fields.
KW - Homeownership habitus
KW - Residential practice
KW - Highly-skilled Chinese migrants
KW - Dutch housing market
KW - Field
U2 - 10.1080/14036096.2024.2353052
DO - 10.1080/14036096.2024.2353052
M3 - Article
SN - 1403-6096
VL - 42
SP - 99
EP - 116
JO - Housing, Theory and Society
JF - Housing, Theory and Society
IS - 1
ER -