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1. Thriving in the neoliberal academia without becoming its agent? Sociologising resilience with an early career academic and a mid-career researcher.

2. Repurposing field analysis for a relational and reflexive sociology of Chinese diasporas.

3. Examination-oriented or quality-oriented? A question for fellows of an alternative teacher preparation program in China.

4. Submission or subversion: survival and resilience of Chinese international research students in neoliberalised Australian universities.

5. Reproducing the urban or reappraising the local? Extracurricular activities developed by fellows in an alternative teacher preparation programme in China.

6. Resilience to neoliberal structural constraints: lessons from Chinese inclusive education teachers.

7. Problematising English monolingualism in the ‘multicultural’ university: a Bourdieusian study of Chinese international research students in Australia.

8. Destroying the Trojan Horse of 'Lazy Inclusivism': Collective Wit of Chinese Children, Parents, and Educators in the Context of 'Learning in Regular Classroom'.

9. Time to Ring the Death Knell for Agency and Resilience? Some Sociological Rethinkings of Inclusive Education.

10. Perceived teacher support and students' acceptance of mobile‐assisted language learning: Evidence from Vietnamese higher education context.

11. Sociologising resilience through Bourdieu's field analysis: misconceptualisation, conceptualisation, and reconceptualisation.

12. Chinese education and Pierre Bourdieu: Power of reproduction and potential for change.

13. Recognising localised pedagogical capital: a reflexive revisit of an alternative teacher preparation programme in China.

14. A Bourdieusian rebuttal to Bourdieu's rebuttal: social network analysis, regression, and methodological breakthroughs.

15. Negotiating Scholarly Identity Through an International Doctoral Workshop: A Cosmopolitan Approach to Doctoral Education.

16. Benefits and limitations of partnerships amongst families, schools and universities: A systematic literature review.

17. Building Pedagogical Content Knowledge within Professional Learning Communities: An approach to counteracting regional education inequality.

18. Building resilience of students with disabilities in China: The role of inclusive education teachers.

19. Chinese inclusive education teachers' agency within temporal-relational contexts.

20. Validation of the Chinese Version of the 12-Item Child and Youth Resilience Measure.

21. Rural dispositions of floating children within the field of Beijing schools: can disadvantaged rural habitus turn into recognised cultural capital?

22. Generating Benefits and Negotiating Tensions through an International Doctoral Forum: A Sociological Analysis.

23. Multidimensional Classroom Support to Inclusive Education Teachers in Beijing, China.

24. Pedagogical Practices and Support Systems of Inclusion: Empirical Evidence from Chinese Societies.

25. An Enquiry into the Professional Competence of Inclusive Education Teachers in Beijing: Attitudes, Knowledge, Skills, and Agency.

26. Coming into an inheritance: family support and Chinese Heritage Language learning.

27. A meta-analysis of the correlation between heritage language and ethnic identity.

28. Revisiting the Trajectories of Special Teacher Education in China through Policy and Practice.

29. Learning Chinese as a heritage language in Australia and beyond: the role of capital.

30. Heritage Language learning for Chinese Australians: the role of habitus.

31. Why do graduates from prestigious universities choose to teach in disadvantaged schools? Lessons from an alternative teacher preparation program in China.

32. The China-threat discourse, trade, and the future of Asia. A Symposium.

33. International Representations of Inclusive Education: How is Inclusive Practice Reflected in the Professional Teaching Standards of China and Australia?

34. The limits to public service: rural communities, professional families and work mobility.

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