China’s economic and military rise dominates discussions of the world’s most populous country. Resilient authoritarian government is credited with great successes, but this book expands the discourse to include governance by village heads - who often ignored central politicians. Chinese reforms for prosperity started circa 1970 under rural and suburban leaders. They could act autonomously then because of unexpected political and technological opportunities. Their localization of power eroded socialist controls. Since 1990, central leaders have tried to reverse reforms made by resilient local bosses. New findings, especially from the Yangzi delta around Shanghai, challenge the top-down approach to thinking about governance. As Deng Xiaoping admitted, the nation’s spurt of prosperity began in local communities rather than Beijing. Reforms for triple-cropping and rural industrialization started long before Mao’s death (not in 1978, the date most writers cite). Country factories competed with state industries for materials and markets. Shortages by the 1980s led to inflation, government deficits, unofficial credit, unenforceable planning, illegal migrations, then international exports - and severe political tensions. After 1990, Party leaders sought policies to build a Leninist regime that is mostly post-socialist. These reactionary changes have lasted into the era of Xi Jinping. China’s reforms and subsequent changes can be understood as results of unintended situations not just ideas, and local not just central politics. This book will interest students and scholars of Chinese, as well as any readers who wonder about comparative development.
Combining theoretical ambition with the flavor of on-the-ground policy-making in Beijing, this book is a major contribution to the study of reform in China and other communist countries.
This book describes through case studies how various factors, such as the single-party political system, traditional culture, market reform, and industrialization, shape public opinion and mass political behavior in urban China.
Cao Qirui , Huang Shixiao , and Guo Dacai , eds . 1996. Difang renda daibiao shi zenyang kaizhan gongzuo de ( How local people's deputies conduct their work ) . Beijing : Zhongguo minzhu fazhi chubanshe . Cao Siyuan . 1996.
Reform And State Capacity eter Tsan-Yin, James Chung. increased by only 30 ... rural enterprises created 50 percent more jobs than the state sector in this ... conservative Chinese leaders after the political events of 1989 could not ...
As the contributors to this volume show, China also faces daunting challenges in sustaining growth, continuing its economic ransformation, addressing the adverse consequences of economic success, and dealing with mounting suspicion from the ...
Nine papers by various authors discussing aspects of economic reform in China over a 20 year period.
... in China ; Esther Cheo Ying , Black country girl in Red China ; Maria Yen , The umbrella garden ; and Yue Daiyun and Carolyn Wakeman , To the storm . Similar vividness is conveyed in some of the portraits in M. Bernard Frolic ...
This new social history of Maoist China provides an accessible view of the complex and tumultuous period when China came under Communist rule.
Revolution and Counterrevolution in China charts China's epic revolutionary trajectory in search of a socialist alternative to the global system, and asks whether market reform must repudiate and overturn the revolution and its legacy.
... Citadins et citoyens dans la Chine du xxe siècle , Paris : Éditions de la MSH , 2010 , pp . 497-540 . Wakeman , F. , Jr , The Shanghai Badlands : Wartime Terrorism and Urban Crime , 1937– 1941 , Cambridge University Press 1996 . — ( ed ...