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Chinese Education in South-East Asia*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2009
Extract
This article surveys the development of Chinese education within South-East Asian Chinese societies, and briefly relates it to the integration and assimilation of the hua ch'iao into indigenous societies.
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- Copyright © The China Quarterly 1964
References
1 The Mandarin term for “Chinese abroad.”Google Scholar
2 The term “Nanyang” here is used synonomously with “Southeast Asia.”Google Scholar
3 Virtually all Nanyang Chinese are of South China origin: Cantonese, Fukkienese, Teochiu, Hakka, and Hainanese. These “ speech group” distinctions are also primary determinants of Chinese social organisation in South-East Asia.Google Scholar
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21 Ibid.
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27 Information was provided in private correspondence by Miss Mary Somers of Cornell University.Google Scholar
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29 Ibid.
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34 Elegant, R., The Dragon's Seed (London: St. Martin's Press, 1959), p. 254.Google Scholar
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36 Ibid.
37 Information on Chinese education in Laos and Cambodia was generously provided in private correspondence by two gentlemen to whom I am greatly indebted: data on Cambodia is from William Willmott, London School of Economics, who recently completed a year of field research on Chinese communities there; data on Laos for both 1959 and 1963 is from John T. S. Chen, of Hong Kong, who lived in Laos for several years.Google Scholar
38 South China Morning Post (Hong Kong), October 2, 1962.Google Scholar
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40 l'Annuaire Statistique Retrospectif du Cambodge (1937–1957) (Phnom Penh: Ministère du Plan, 1958), p. 24.Google ScholarAn unofficial source put 1952 enrolment around 15,000. Steinberg, D. J., Cambodia: its People, its Society, its Culture (New Haven: Human Relations Area File, 1959), p. 256.Google Scholar
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45 News From Vietnam (Embassy of the Republic of Vietnam, Washington, D.C.), VI, 1960.Google Scholar
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66 Ibid.
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77 Assuming that no more than half those in mainland China were studying below the university level.Google Scholar
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