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Identities
Global Studies in Culture and Power
Volume 27, 2020 - Issue 2
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Articles

Diasporic kinship hegemonies and transnational continuities in the Hmong diaspora

Pages 229-247 | Received 22 Feb 2017, Accepted 15 Mar 2018, Published online: 10 Jul 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Although hegemony has been understood as the property of nation-states and the ruling classes, this paper explores cultural hegemonies among diasporic peoples by examining the pervasive compliance of Hmong living in Laos and the United States with the principles of their kinship system. Since these kinship rules are inculcated through parental education from an early age and are seen as essential for maintaining the cohesion of their dispersed diasporic community in the absence of a territorial ancestral homeland, they have become culturally engrained and taken-for-granted by Hmong through their voluntary consent and no longer have to be enforced by overt power and coercive means. However, like all hegemonies, the Hmong kinship system may also confront increasing challenges and contestation as it is enacted in the different nation-states where Hmong reside, and may eventually become an ideology that needs to be actively enforced and imposed by the direct use of power.

Acknowledgments

I am grateful for the editors and for the helpful comments of the anonymous reviewers.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1. All names in Lao and Hmong, including the village in this paper, are pseudonyms.

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