International Journal of Conflict and Violence (Dec 2010)

Boundaries, Discrimination, and Interethnic Conflict in Xinjiang, China

  • Enze Han

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 244 – 256

Abstract

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<div>The Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region has been afflicted by Uighur political activism and ethnic violence for the past few decades. Interethnic&nbsp;relations&nbsp;between the Uighurs and Han Chinese have been extremely tense. Why is Xinjiang so vulnerable to interethnic&nbsp;violence? Why are intergroup</div><div>dynamics&nbsp;between the Uighurs and Han Chinese so volatile? This paper examines Uighur&ndash;Han Chinese relations in contemporary Xinjiang and probes conditions&nbsp;that facilitate interethnic&nbsp;violence. Utilizing Fredrik Barth&rsquo;s approach to ethnicity that emphasizes boundaries, this paper examines in detail how the rigid&nbsp;interethnic&nbsp;boundary between the Uighurs and Han Chinese has been constructed and strengthened in Xinjiang. Perceived differences have generated&nbsp;mutual distrust and discrimination between the two groups that make intergroup&nbsp;communication and understanding difficult and therefore very limited.&nbsp;In situations such as that in Xinjiang, where a rigid intergroup&nbsp;boundary is in place and civic engagements across groups are lacking, intergroup&nbsp;conflict is</div><div>extremely hard to avoid.</div>

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