<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD JATS (Z39.96) Journal Publishing DTD v1.3 20210610//EN" "JATS-journalpublishing1-3.dtd">
<article article-type="research-article" dtd-version="1.3" xml:lang="en"
    xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"
    xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
    xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
    <processing-meta tagset-family="jats" base-tagset="publishing" mathml-version="2.0" table-model="xhtml"/>
    <front>
                        
                        <journal-meta>
            <issn>2081-4488</issn>
                                </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <title-group>
                                    <article-title>Filial Piety Across Borders: Decision-Making and Migration Experiences of Young Chinese in Poland</article-title>
                            </title-group>

                        <contrib-group>
                                                            <contrib contrib-type="author" corresp="yes">
                            <name>
                                <surname>Ożegalska-Łukasik</surname>
                                <given-names>Natalia</given-names>
                            </name>
                            <role>author</role>
                                                                                                                                    <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff-1"/>
                                                                                        <xref ref-type="corresp" rid="cor-1"/>
                        </contrib>
                                                </contrib-group>

                                                                                        <aff id="aff-1">
                    <institution-wrap>
                        <institution>Uniwersytet Jagielloński w Krakowie</institution>
                                                    <institution-id institution-id-type="ROR">03bqmcz70</institution-id>
                                            </institution-wrap>
                </aff>
                            
            <author-notes>
                                    <corresp id="cor-1">Correspondence to: Natalia Ożegalska-Łukasik <email>natalia.ozegalska@uj.edu.pl</email></corresp>
                            </author-notes>

                            <pub-date date-type="pub" publication-format="electronic" iso-8601-date="2025-04-17">
                    <day>17</day>
                    <month>04</month>
                    <year>2025</year>
                </pub-date>
            
            <volume>Nr 1 (195)</volume>
            <issue>2025 (LI)</issue>
                        <fpage>147</fpage>
                                    <lpage>165</lpage>
            
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright &#x00A9; 2025</copyright-statement>
                                    <copyright-year>2025</copyright-year>
                            </permissions>

            <funding-group specific-use="Crossref">
                <funding-statement>The work was supported by the National Science Centre (NCN) PRELUDIUM grant no 2019/33/N/HS3/01885.</funding-statement>
            </funding-group>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        China’s birth control policy and modernization efforts in the late 20th century altered family structures, which made children primarily responsible for elderly care. As a result, Chinese migrants face new challenges in maintaining family obligations, particularly in countries like Poland, which has a relatively small Chinese diaspora. This study analyzes the migration experience, including migration decision-making factors, perception of filial piety (&lt;em&gt;xiao&lt;/em&gt;), and practices of maintaining family ties abroad for Chinese migrants in Poland. The research is based on Reflective Thematic Analysis (RTA) and draws on 30 interviews conducted between 2022 and 2023 with Chinese individuals residing in Poland for at least a year. The paper studies the complex social, cultural, and emotional factors that influence how migrants fulfill their family responsibilities abroad. Findings reveal that Chinese migrants generally view Poland as a temporary residence, with limited opportunities to develop transnational care strategies. For most participants, the decision to choose Poland as a migration destination was determined by external factors, and they expressed the desire to return to China, anticipating a deeper emotional engagement with their ageing parents upon their return. The migration experience prompts significant changes in their awareness, future plans, and participation in elder care.
    </body>
    <back>
                    <ref-list>
                                                                                <ref id="B1">
                            <label>1</label>
                            <article-title>Attali, J. (2020). L’économie de la vie: Se préparer à ce qui vient. Paris:Fayard.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B2">
                            <label>2</label>
                            <article-title>Bifarin, O., Quinn, C., Breen, L., Zhang, B., &amp;amp; Oyebode, J. (2022). Intersections between the culture of Xiao (孝) and caring for older relatives in China: perspectives of United Kingdombased Chinese students on future care for their parents. Ageing &amp;amp; Society, 1–21. http://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X22001118</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B3">
                            <label>3</label>
                            <article-title>Braun, V., &amp;amp; Clarke, V. (2006). Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qualitative Research in Psychology, 3, 77–101.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B4">
                            <label>4</label>
                            <article-title>Braun, V., &amp;amp; Clarke, V. (2013). Successful Qualitative Research: A Practical Guide for Beginners. London: Sage.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B5">
                            <label>5</label>
                            <article-title>Braun, V., &amp;amp; Clarke, V. (2014). What can ‘thematic analysis’ offer health and wellbeing researchers? International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being, 9, 26152.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B6">
                            <label>6</label>
                            <article-title>Braun, V., &amp;amp; Clarke, V. (2022). Thematic Analysis: A Practical Guide. London: Sage.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B7">
                            <label>7</label>
                            <article-title>Byrne, D. (2022). A worked example of Braun and Clarke’s approach to reflexive thematic analysis. Quality &amp;amp; Quantity, 56, 1391–1412.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B8">
                            <label>8</label>
                            <article-title>Chan, A., &amp;amp; Tan, S.-H. (2004). Filial Piety in Chinese Thought and History, London: Routledge.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B9">
                            <label>9</label>
                            <article-title>Cefalo, R., Rose, M., &amp;amp; Jolly, A. (Eds.) (2023). Social Policy Review 35: Analysis and Debate in Social Policy, Bristol: Policy Press. Chappell, N. L., &amp;amp; Kusch, K. (2007). The gendered nature of filial piety – A study among Chinese Canadians. Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, 22(1), 29–45.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B10">
                            <label>10</label>
                            <article-title>Collins, J. (2002). Chinese entrepreneurs: The Chinese Diaspora in Australia, International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior &amp;amp; Research, 8(1/2), 113–133.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B11">
                            <label>11</label>
                            <article-title>Cross J. (2006). Engaging Diversity At An Australian University: Chinese International Students’ Perceptions Of Their Social Experience While Studying In Australia, EDU-COM 2006 International Conference. Engagement and Empowerment: New Opportunities for Growth in Higher Education, Edith Cowan University, Perth Western Australia, 22–24 November 2006, Edith Cowan University Research Online, 154–163.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B12">
                            <label>12</label>
                            <article-title>Démurger, S., &amp;amp; Xu, H. (2011). Return migrants: The rise of new entrepreneurs in rural China. World Development, 39(10), 1847–1861.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B13">
                            <label>13</label>
                            <article-title>Deutsch, F. M. (2006). Filial Piety, Patrilineality, and China’s One-Child Policy. Journal of Family Issues, 27(3), 366–389.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B14">
                            <label>14</label>
                            <article-title>Dong, Z. (2005). The effects of length of residence and level of acculturation on the attitudes towards filial piety among Chinese students studying in the United States. Ohio State University, Master’s thesis.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B15">
                            <label>15</label>
                            <article-title>Dong, X., Zhang, M., &amp;amp; Simon, M. A. (2014). The expectation and perceived receipt of filial piety among Chinese older adults in the greater Chicago area. Journal of Aging and Health, 26(7), 1225–1247.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B16">
                            <label>16</label>
                            <article-title>Gao, W. (2017). New Chinese migrants in Latin America: Trends and patterns of adaptation. Contemporary Chinese diasporas, 333–348.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B17">
                            <label>17</label>
                            <article-title>Gungwu, W. (2006). Patterns Of Chinese Migration In Historical Perspective. In: The Chinese Overseas, Liu, H. (ed.), New York: Routledge, 33–49.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B18">
                            <label>18</label>
                            <article-title>Ho, D. (1996). Filial piety and its psychological consequences. In: The Handbook of Chinese Psychology, Bond M. H. (ed.), Hong Kong: Oxford University Press, 155–165.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B19">
                            <label>19</label>
                            <article-title>Ho, E. S., &amp;amp; Chiang, L. N. (2017). Long-distance Filial Piety: Chinese Families in Australasia Caring for Elderly Parents across Borders, Translocal Chinese: East Asian Perspectives, 11(2), 278–311.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B20">
                            <label>20</label>
                            <article-title>Holzman, D. (1998). The Place of Filial Piety in Ancient China. Journal of the American Oriental Society, 118(2), 185–199.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B21">
                            <label>21</label>
                            <article-title>Kardaszewicz, K. (2018). Migrant Ties and Integration – A case of Chinese Community in Poland, CMR Working Papers, 106/164.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B22">
                            <label>22</label>
                            <article-title>Kurczewski, P. (2011). Diaspora chińska na świecie – ewolucja zjawiska. Azja-Pacyfik, 14, 151–182.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B23">
                            <label>23</label>
                            <article-title>Legge, J. (1883). The Sacred Books of China. In: Sacred Books of the East, vol. II. Muller, F.M. (ed.). London: Oxford University Press.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B24">
                            <label>24</label>
                            <article-title>Li, X., Zou, H., Liu, Y., &amp;amp; Zhou, Q. (2014). The relationships of family socioeconomic status, parent–adolescent conflict, and filial piety to adolescents’ family functioning in Mainland China. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 23(1), 29–38.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B25">
                            <label>25</label>
                            <article-title>Liang, H. et al. (2023). The association between financial support of adult children to their parents and informal care provision in China and its differences in household registration, residence arrangement and community-based care services: 2008 – 2018. International Journal for Equity in Health, 22(1) doi:10.1186/s12939-023-01856-z.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B26">
                            <label>26</label>
                            <article-title>Lin, X., Dow, B., Boldero, J., &amp;amp; Bryant, C. (2020). Parent–child relationships among older immigrants from Mainland China: A descriptive study using the solidarity, conflict, and ambivalence perspectives. Journal of Family Studies, 26(4), 564–579.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B27">
                            <label>27</label>
                            <article-title>Linyan, L. I., Boqing, C. (2023). Hope and Paradox in Contemporary Chinese Society: A Moment for Cultural Transformation?. The American Sociologist, 54(1), 101–122.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B28">
                            <label>28</label>
                            <article-title>Liu, Z.-F., &amp;amp; Lin, G. (1988). ChuanTongYuZhongGuoRen [Tradition and Chinese People]. Hong Kong: Joint Publishing Company.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B29">
                            <label>29</label>
                            <article-title>Liu, L. S. (2016). Intergenerational dimensions of transnational Chinese migrant families in New Zealand – A research gap identified. Journal of Chinese Overseas, 12(2), 216–250.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B30">
                            <label>30</label>
                            <article-title>Mengwei, T. &amp;amp; Nehring, D. (2020), The moral grammar of Chinese transnational one-child families: Filial piety and middle-class migration between China and the United Kingdom. In: Chinese Immigrants in Europe: Image, Identity and Social Participation, Liu, Y. and Wang, S. (eds.), Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 167–186.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B31">
                            <label>31</label>
                            <article-title>Nichols, R. (2013). The Origins and Effects of Filial Piety (Xiao 孝): How Culture Solves an Evolutionary Problem for Parents. Journal of Cognition and Culture, 13, 201–230.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B32">
                            <label>32</label>
                            <article-title>Office for Foreigners (2021). Cudzoziemcy w Polsce po 2020 r., https://www.gov.pl/web/udsc/cudzoziemcy-w-polsce-po-2020-r. Accessed: 02.09.2024.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B33">
                            <label>33</label>
                            <article-title>Ogonowska-Rejer, A. (2022). Zagraniczni studenci na Polskich uczelniach. Skąd są, co i gdzie studiują?, Rzeczpospolita, 22.03.2022.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B34">
                            <label>34</label>
                            <article-title>Pan, L., &amp;amp; Chinese Heritage Center (Singapore). (1999). The encyclopedia of the Chinese overseas. Harvard University Press.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B35">
                            <label>35</label>
                            <article-title>Poston, D., &amp;amp; Wong, J. (2016). The Chinese diaspora: The current distribution of the overseas Chinese population, Chinese Journal of Sociology, 2, 348–373.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B36">
                            <label>36</label>
                            <article-title>Różycka-Tran, J., Jurek, P., Olech, M. &amp;amp; Dmochowski, T. (2021). A Measurement Invariance Investigation of the Polish Version of the Dual Filial-Piety Scale (DFPS-PL): Student-Employee and Gender Differences in Filial Beliefs. Frontiers in Psychology. 12, 713395.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B37">
                            <label>37</label>
                            <article-title>Sethi, B., Williams, A., Leung, J. L. S. (2022). Caregiving Across International Borders: a Systematic Review of Literature on Transnational Carer-Employees. Journal of cross-cultural gerontology, 37(4), 427–461.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B38">
                            <label>38</label>
                            <article-title>Singh, J. K. N. (2019). Why do Chinese international students studying in Australia repatriate? Australian Chinese graduates tell it all. Journal of Further and Higher Education, 44(9), 1207–1219.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B39">
                            <label>39</label>
                            <article-title>Smart, A., &amp;amp; Hsu, J. Y. (2004). The Chinese diaspora, foreign investment and economic development in China. The Review of International Affairs, 3(4), 544–566.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B40">
                            <label>40</label>
                            <article-title>Song, Q. &amp;amp; Liang, Z. (2019). New Emigration From China: Patterns, Causes And Impacts. Dang Dai Zhongguo Yan Jiu, 26.1, 5–31.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B41">
                            <label>41</label>
                            <article-title>Sun, P., Fan, X., Sun, Y., Jiang, H., &amp;amp; Wang, L. (2019). Relations between dual filial piety and life satisfaction: The mediating roles of individuating autonomy and relating autonomy. Frontiers in Psychology, 10, 2549.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B42">
                            <label>42</label>
                            <article-title>Sun, Y. (2021). Relation between Filial Piety and Study Abroad Intention among Chinese Youth: Toward a Theoretical Model, Intercultural Communications Studies, XXX: 2.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B43">
                            <label>43</label>
                            <article-title>Suryadinata, L. (2017). Blurring the Distinction between Huaqiao and Huaren: China’s Changing Policy towards the Chinese Overseas. In: Southeast Asian Affairs, Singh, D., Cook, M. (eds.), ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute, 101–114.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B44">
                            <label>44</label>
                            <article-title>Tu, M. (2016). Chinese one-child families in the age of migration: middle-class transnational mobility, ageing parents, and the changing role of filial piety”. Journal of Chinese Sociology, 3(15). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40711-016-0036-z</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B45">
                            <label>45</label>
                            <article-title>United Nations (2022). World Population Prospects. https://population.un.org/wpp/. Accessed: 02.09.2024.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B46">
                            <label>46</label>
                            <article-title>Vogel, E. F. (1965). From friendship to comradeship: The change in personal relations in communist China. The China Quarterly, 21, 46–60.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B47">
                            <label>47</label>
                            <article-title>Wang, D., Laidlaw, K., Power, M. J., &amp;amp; Shen, J. (2009). Older people’s belief of filial piety in China: Expectation and non-expectation. Clinical Gerontologist, 33(1), 21–38.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B48">
                            <label>48</label>
                            <article-title>Wang, Y., Wan, G., &amp;amp; Gu, Y. (2023). Consistency and transformation of filial responsibility attitudes in China: Evidence from panel study of family dynamics of 2004 and 2017. Journal of Family Issues, 44(2), 315–337.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B49">
                            <label>49</label>
                            <article-title>Wardęga, J. (2017). Chińczycy w Polsce – Niewidoczna Mniejszość. Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny, 43(2), 121–41.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B50">
                            <label>50</label>
                            <article-title>Yang, K. S., Yeh, K.-H., &amp;amp; Lei, T. (1989). Sociopsychological and structural-developmental studies of filial piety: concepts, methods, and findings. In: Moral Reasoning, Values, and Development in Chinese Societies, Gielen, U.P. and Lee, T., (eds.), New York: St. Francis College.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B51">
                            <label>51</label>
                            <article-title>Yang, W. (2019). The Sequence of Loyalty and Filial Piety and Its Ideological Origins in the Traditional Ethical Culture of China and Japan. Ethics in Progress, 10(2), 155–164.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B52">
                            <label>52</label>
                            <article-title>Yao, L., &amp;amp; Feng, D. (2022). Promoting filial piety through public service advertising: a multimodal discourse analysis approach. Chinese Semiotic Studies, 18(4), 581–603.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B53">
                            <label>53</label>
                            <article-title>Yeh, K.-H. (1999). The beneficial and harmful effects of filial piety: an integrative analysis. In: Progress in Asian Social Psychology, Yang, K.S., Hwang, K.K., Pedersen, P., Daibo, I. (eds.), Westport: Praeger.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B54">
                            <label>54</label>
                            <article-title>Yeh, K.-H., &amp;amp; Bedford, O. (2003). A test of the Dual Filial Piety model. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 6, 215–228.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B55">
                            <label>55</label>
                            <article-title>Yeh, K.-H. (2006). The impact of filial piety on the problem behaviours of culturally Chinese adolescents. Journal of Psychology in Chinese Societies, 7, 237–257.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B56">
                            <label>56</label>
                            <article-title>Yeh, K.-H., Yi, C.-C., Tsao, W.-C., &amp;amp; Wan, P.-S. (2013). Filial piety in contemporary Chinese societies: a comparative study of Taiwan, Hong Kong, and China. International Sociology, 28, 277–296.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B57">
                            <label>57</label>
                            <article-title>Zhan, H. J. (2005). Willingness and Expectations: Intergenerational Differences in Attitudes Toward Filial Responsibility in China. In: Parent-youth relations: Cultural and cross-cultural perspectives, Peterson, G.W., Steinmetz, S. K., and Wilson, S. M. (eds.), 339–362, Haworth Press.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B58">
                            <label>58</label>
                            <article-title>Zhang, Y. (2016). “Practising and displaying xiao—young mothers’ negotiations of obligations to elders”. J. Chin. Sociol. 3, 27. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40711-016-0047-9 </article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B59">
                            <label>59</label>
                            <article-title>Zhang, M., Lin, T., Wang, D., Jiao, W. (2020). Filial piety dilemma solutions in Chinese adult children: The role of contextual theme, filial piety beliefs, and generation. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 23(2), 227–237.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B60">
                            <label>60</label>
                            <article-title>Zhang, Y., Wang, J., Zu, Y. &amp;amp; Hu Q. (2021), Attitudes of Chinese College Students Toward Aging and Living Independently in the Context of China’s Modernization: A Qualitative Study. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 609736.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                                                                    <ref id="B61">
                            <label>61</label>
                            <article-title>Zhao, X. (2019). Disconnective intimacies through social media: practices of transnational family among overseas Chinese students in Australia. Media International Australia, 173(1), 36–52.</article-title>
                        </ref>
                                                </ref-list>
            </back>
</article>
