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�������tt������������8���4�e{l���������z�z�z�z�z�z�z�|�s:�z9�������z����4�z�������z��z��������0l�����z{0e{��n��x��x���������z�z����e{����������������������������������������������������������������������������������tf: the china journal
issue 66, july 2011
1. title: accepting authoritarianism: state-society relations in china's reform era
authors: minxin pei.
abstract: the book needs to address the issue of change, and specifically, under what conditions these key social groups may reject authoritarianism. [...] wright needs to address an intriguing puzzle: if all the key social groups in china have either accepted or acquiesced in authoritarian rule, why does the chinese communist party exhibit such a sense of insecurity?
2. title: agricultural modernization and state capacity in china
authors: scott waldron, colin brown, john longworth.
abstract: the contemporary chinese state has been depicted as strong, weak, developmental, entrepreneurial, clientelist, predatory, corporatist and regulatory.9 a major reason for these paradoxical depictions is that the state and its capacity vary by economic sector, policy area and region.10 the variation is particularly high in a country as diverse as china, which consists of not just one but a series of political economies, side by side. [...] a comparative analysis of state capacities across sectors, policy areas and regions provides a robust and empirically wellgrounded approach to understanding china's political economy.
3. title: allies of the state: china's private entrepreneurs and democratic change
authors: colin hawes.
abstract: the questions in the second category are clearly loaded: for example, "if a country has multiple parties (hao ji ge zhengdang), it can lead to political chaos" (pp. 74, 167). [...] apart from the question design, the interpretation of the survey results given here could also be challenged.
4. title: arrested histories: tibet, the cia, and memories of a forgotten war
authors: p christiaan klieger.
abstract: the social process of arrested histories in tibet acknowledges the long-term buddhist practice of gter ma, the hiding of religious texts (often commentaries) until the proper time and place for their revelation. mcgranahan argues that the historical milieu which created the concept of gter ma has facilitated an heuristic ordering of many historical narratives, in this case a history of the khampa resistance to the pla occupying forces in tibet from 1956 to 1974.
5. title: art in turmoil: the chinese cultural revolution 1966-76
authors: ling-yun tang.
abstract: in chapter 6, ralph croizier's in-depth analysis of hu xian peasant paintings attributes their endurance to artists' pragmatic blending of political correctness and folk experimentation during the cultural revolution and willingness to capitalize on nostalgic forms in the international market. [...] part iv, "beyond the visual arts", turns to performance art as a site of contentious meaning-making.
6. title: china and the global environment: learning from the past, anticipating the future
authors: ole bruun.
abstract: while environmental policy formulation and law-making in china may be cited repeatedly for their international standards, actual practices of production, polluting and environmental monitoring are a different matter; china's ability to reach a real turning point in its own environmental destruction remains to be seen. the book's chapters move through both distant and more recent history, the role of governance and civil society actors in the present society, global issues of environmental leadership, and the implications for sino-australian environmental cooperation.
7. title: china in the 21st century: what everyone needs to know
authors: jennifer w jay.
abstract: in an academic career characterized by distinguished service to the profession, this versatile scholar and china beat blogger now delivers a seemingly light-weight but clever and provocative "china for dummies" primer with a balanced perspective on a country where the past continues to link the present with the future. using 108 questions and answers formulated from several decades of teaching in the united states and from public lectures from around the world, in addition to current secondary scholarship, wasserstrom expertly guides the general reader to digest chinese history, politics and popular culture in two sections.
8. title: china�s new economic policy under hua guofeng:party consensus and party muths
authors: frederick c teiwes, warren sun.
abstract: in the most incisive statement of this analysis, joseph fewsmith argued that "reforms emerged as part of the struggle for power against hua guofeng and the wing of the party that he represented" and that deng and his allies "formulated an approach to the economy as part of the attack on hua".3 in this article, we offer an alternative interpretation of initial post-mao prc economic policy,4 arguing that a power struggle did not influence evolving economic approaches in 1 977-7 8,5 and that on all key dimensions - the overambitious drive for growth, a newly expansive policy of openness to the outside world, and limited steps toward management reform - hua and deng were in basic agreement. in a striking private appraisal in the context of the april 1979 economic work conference, hu yaobang observed that chen yun, who was just recovering from health problems, had said little and deng was preoccupied with non-economic matters, while "chairman hua has a comparatively profound understanding of the necessity for economic system reform".68 in any case, hua's weakness did not lie in his policy program, and was certainly not due to a rigid adherence to "whatever" mao had endorsed.
9. title: chinese anti-rightist campaign (1957-)
authors: warren sun.
abstract: [...] questioning, surprisingly raised even by ordinary university students, proves highly insightful, telling us how far the authorities had gone in manipulating the writing of history, and also the limits of that manipulation. [...] this database has also collected many primary materials that could prompt the rewriting of history about well-respected public intellectuals like fu lei, mao dun, ba jin, lao she, cao yu, wan ruowang, xu guangping (lu xun's wife) and zhang bojun.
10. title: learning to serve: urban youth, vocational schools and new class formations in china
authors: t e woronov.
abstract: [...] i describe how vocational education is structurally and ideologically producing a separate status group of young people, who generally fall outside the hegemonic notion of class mobility and middle-class moral citizenship that is linked to human capital development in china today. 7 for example, in their influential work on the new rich in china, goodman and zang point out: class may be related varyingly to economic structures, income, patterns of consumption, value concerns and lifestyles, and often bewilderingly in multiple dimensions at the same time.8 other writers in the same collection have extended this list, so that class may also be defined by education level, occupation, social status, taste and aesthetic values, as well as possible subjective factors.\n60 these new social groups are based not only on physical location - groups of young people studying together in a classroom - but are produced in the ideological space created in certain educational environments. [...] just as housing provides zhang with insight into the spacialization of class among the middle-class,61 and dormitories serve as a privileged site for pun and smith to see the formation of a new working class, so do schools provide insights into the formation of new service classes.
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11 title: chinese economic development and the environment
authors: zhongxiang zhang.
abstract: [...] it uses provincial-level panel data from 30 chinese provinces over time, while existing studies focus mostly on the national level. [...] the book illustrates how a variety of models and techniques can be used in very broad and diversifying areas.
12. title: cities surround the countryside: urban aesthetics in postsocialist china
authors: maurizio marinelli.
abstract: the power bases established in the countryside, where the enemy was weak, were crucial tactical elements for mao's mobilization of the entire population: the countryside surrounded the city in the sense that the rural bases of warfare were turned into a military force which helped the ccp to seize political power. ultimately, the originality and significance of the book lies in visser's investigation of how urban transformation in beijing and shanghai in the 1990s has informed the cultural landscape, as indicated by fiction, cinema, visual art, architecture and urban design.
13. title: civilizing missions: international religious agencies in china
authors: gerda wielander.
abstract: [...] the assumption, as made in this book, that the agenda of christian agencies and the chinese government necessarily conflict with one another is based on historical evidence, but is not substantiated in the contemporary context within which hirono's case studies are set.
14. title: contemporary chinese politics: new sources, methods, and field strategies
authors: christian g�bel.
abstract: [...] lily l. tsai argues convincingly that especially in rural contexts and with respect to sensitive research questions, a "socially embedded" approach to survey research is superior to conventional forms. [...] for china scholars, the book is sure to contain many gems which they can incorporate in their own research, and it offers an excellent base against which to review and possibly broaden their own methodological toolkit.
15. title: corporate governance and financial reform in china's transition economy
authors: richard pascoe.
abstract: wto entry was, for china, an external lever to constrain the policy options of government and to push forward market-oriented reforms, in particular corporate governance reforms of soes and state banks, through shareholding restructuring and public listing in domestic and overseas markets. for leng, the chinese stock market, started as a cash cow for soes, has so far failed to serve as an efficient resource allocator in china's economic structure, and the quality of corporate governance in the listed companies remains poor, largely due to inadequate legal and institutional reforms.
16. title: cosmologies of credit: transnational mobility and the politics of destination in china
authors: jamie coates.
abstract: [...] under the theme of "emplacement", she describes the enthusiasm found for maps of desired cities in america, the rapid changes occurring in longyan's architectural landscape and the fervent practice with well-worn english manuals. [...] they hedge their bets in as many ways as possible through religious practice, cosmopolitan cultivation and the production of vast mobile networks.
17. title: cultivating global citizens: population in the rise of china
authors: delia davin.
abstract: based on three lectures delivered at harvard's fairbank center for chinese studies, cultivating global citizens is an "ideas" book in which greenhalgh muses on the intended and unintended impacts of the one-child policy, not on the quantity of china's population but on its character, or what she calls "the making of modem chinese selves and society". despite some individual resistance to strict birth limitation, the state has also succeeded in establishing lower fertility norms, in the context of rapid economic growth, urbanization and increased living standards.
18. title: electing hong kong's chief executive
authors: joseph yu-shek cheng.
abstract: [...] academics in hong kong work primarily to improve the international rankings of their tertiary institutions through publications in scolisted journals, and thus have little incentive to engage in studies to inform the public, stimulate public debate and contribute to better public policy-making. [...] the electoral system ensures victory for the candidate for ce picked by the chinese leadership and a majority for the pro-beijing united front in the legislature.
19. title: elusive pirates, pervasive smugglers: violence and clandestine trade in the greater china seas
authors: david a rosenberg.
abstract: multinational clandestine trade on the south china coast, 1520-50, james k. chin provides several individual case studies of how illegal trade spread throughout the chinese economy. arbitrary and capricious restrictions on maritime commerce gave merchants incentive to turn to piracy and smuggling, with widespread support from coastal inhabitants who served as fences, suppliers and arms dealers.
20. title: gated communities in china: class, privilege and the moral politics of the good life
authors: beibei tang.
abstract: drawing on rich ethnographic research in shanghai, choon-piew pow examines the moral politics of middle-class place-making in china's commodity housing enclaves, and how privileged social groups residing in shanghai's gated communities use housing consumption as a form of social distinction by attempting to carve out and defend what are deemed to be their "rightful" private spaces. according to pow, housing consumption leads to lifestyle differentiation, a new modem urban identity and status distinction.
21. title: in search of paradise: middle-class living in a chinese metropolis
authors: beatriz carrillo.
abstract: because of the huge profits to be made from selling and acquiring land use rights, zhang tells us, controlling land became "the fastest way to wealth, commercial development, and political power" (p. 46). according to zhang, although many of these land redevelopments are advanced through the language of modernization and beautification of the city, they are in fact the result of corrupt dealings between government authorities and developers.
22. title: investigative journalism in china: eight cases in chinese watchdog journalism
authors: terry narramore.
abstract: the article reviews the book �investigative journalism in china: eight cases in chinese watchdog journalism� by david bandurski and martin hala.
23. title: mainstream culture refocused: television drama, society, and the production of meaning in reform-era china
authors: shuyu kong.
abstract: there is an almost total absence of audience studies in the form of receiving rates, fan responses or critical reviews of the tv dramas (the only exception being some brief and general comments in chapter 4 about the reception of soldier be ready). since tv drama is a typical mass cultural form and its multiple uncertain meanings are often generated through the process of reception, a more receptionoriented discourse analysis might have provided deeper insights into the social meanings of chinese tv drama.
24. title: mao's forgotten successor: the political career of hua guofeng
authors: thomas p bernstein.
abstract: after mao's death and the purge of the "gang of four", in which he played a decisive role, he occupied for a time the three top positions of chairman of the central committee, chairman of the central military commission and the premiership, but was ousted from all of them by 1981. at the 11th party congress, he called for continued class struggle and for new cultural revolutions in the future, an "unnecessary tactical error" (p. 152), given his own record as a mao-loyal centrist.
25. title: mobility and cultural authority in contemporary china
authors: tim oakes.
abstract: rather than simply treating mobility, then, as an external and inherently subversive threat to the state's social order, nyiri views it as what foucault would call a "technology of government", a mechanism for the formation of new chinese citizen-subjects. [...] nyiri finds that the chinese state has been "remarkably successful" at containing the subversive potential of mobility, by maintaining an hegemonic interpretive authority over the migrant and tourist experience both within china and abroad, resulting in a "remarkably uniform" understanding of chinese national identity and citizenship among china's newly mobile �lites and laborers alike.
26. title: politics in china: an introduction
authors: lowell dittmer.
abstract: [...] its coverage is really quite comprehensive, ranging from the guangxu emperor to hu jintao and his likely successor xi jinping, and from public health and the environmental crisis to the future of electoral democracy in hong kong.
27. title: reciprocity, social support networks and social creativity in a chinese village
authors: danning wang.
abstract: proceeding logically from the interpersonal relationships detailed in the first section, she focuses on the expressive wanglai to demonstrate how the exchange of gifts creates and consolidates the social networks that subsequently provide financial, emotional and social support throughout a villager's life cycle, as well as during crisis periods precipitated by events such as natural and man-made disasters. in this "messy and muddled" domain, she notes two ways in which the general belief in spirits is tightly entangled with local networks of reciprocal social exchange: first, as the fatalist explanation of the villagers' current relationships and fortunes, which are the predetermined consequence of their previous conduct in the other realm, and second, through the inclusion of ancestors and local gods in all the ceremonies and rituals in the villagers' everyday life.
28. title: red star over the pacific: china's rise and the challenge to u.s. maritime strategy
authors: david a rosenberg.
abstract: since the 1980s, the navy has realized a strategic transformation to offshore defensive operations. since the beginning of the new century ... the navy has been striving to improve ... its capabilities of integrated offshore operations, strategic deterrence and strategic counter-attacks, and to gradually develop its capabilities of conducting cooperation in distant waters and countering nontraditional security threats
29. title: regime inclusion and the resilience of authoritarianism: the local people's political consultative conference in post-mao chinese politics
authors: xiaojun yan.
abstract: while political rebellions have challenged dictators from central asia to north africa, the communist regime in china has not only survived the political, economic and ideological crises of the 1990s but has thrived, to an extent that some outside observers began to perceive its method of operating as a fledgling "consensus" that might one day threaten the appeal of the dominant western model of market capitalism with electoral democracy.1 scholars who examine the persistence of regimes like china's argue that political institutions are "essential for understanding authoritarian politics".2 beatriz magaloni suggests that political institutions "shape bargaining between the dictator and his ruling coalition" and serve as "the instruments through which dictators spy, co-opt, or repress opponents".3 under communist systems, many of these functions are undertaken by a specific kind of political institution, which i refer to in this article as inclusive regime institutions. [...] as a representative institution with a role in regime inclusion, the pc has less institutional flexibility and relatively limited room for political manipulation of the party-state.
30. title: shanghai: china's gateway to modernity
authors: bryna goodman.
abstract: the english title of berg�re' s book both affirms the city's historical mission and recalls rhoads murphey's shanghai, key to modern china (1953), which portrayed shanghai as fertile soil for the transplantation of modem western commercial, financial and industrial institutions. berg�re's own meticulous scholarship of the 1980s, particularly her acclaimed golden age of the chinese bourgeoisie, illuminated the social and economic structures of shanghai's early-20 -century business class, and examined the ways in which shanghai's economic dynamism of the early 1920s was built upon traditional chinese social foundations, not simply upon the dynamism that developed from the transnational flows of trade and ideas that characterized shanghai's existence as a treaty port.
31. title: sites of horror: mao's great famine/response
authors: felix wemheuer, frank dik�tter.
abstract: offering more original insights are the chapters "destruction", "survival", "the vulnerable" and "ways of dying", in which dik�tter reveals in great detail how people suffered, died or struggled to survive. [...] instead of seeing china as a disciplined, unitary communist society, he believes that the famine created disintegration, "leaving people to resort to whatever means were available to survive"
32. title: spectacle and sacrifice: the ritual foundations of village life in north china
authors: fan zhang.
abstract: with a mastery of the abundant local sources and a good selection of case studies, johnson argues successfully that the remote villages and less-documented rituals have much to teach us about the remarkably diverse, conservative rural culture and village life in north china. since chinese culture was a "performance culture" with communal rituals as the highest expression of local values and ideas (p. 8), johnson shows how essential the study of village rituals is to the understanding of the life and beliefs of the countryside folk, who have often been neglected as passive and voiceless in previous historical and cultural studies.
33. title: state and society: responses to social welfare needs in china: serving the people
authors: david j davies.
abstract: timothy hildebrandt and jennifer turner look at the impact which environmental ngos - which work largely within central government guidelines - have had on environmental education and habitat protection by carefully negotiating the priorities of local officials. jonathan schwartz turns to the high-profile predicament of china's neglected public health system, which was caught unprepared in 2003 by the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars), a deadly disease with epidemic potential.
34. title: the dragon's gift: the real story of china in africa
authors: barry sautman.
abstract: brautigam shows that not even in the late 1960s and early-to-mid- 19 70s - when china's economic level was lower than most african countries, aid was 5 per cent of chinese state expenditure, and its aid workers in africa lived like locals - did the chinese government think in terms of "altruism". most chinese activity in africa is now for-profit trade and investment by state-owned and private firms, often as joint ventures with local companies, although aid does continue, exemplified by medical teams, agricultural demonstration centers and africans trained in china.
35. title: the great image has no form, or on the nonobject through painting
authors: charles lachman.
abstract: among his many earlier works, detour and access (1995) focused on strategies of meaning in china and greece, the impossible nude (2000) examined chinese and european traditions of nudity in art, and silent transformations (2009) pondered chinese and western notions of time and the process of change. [...] jullien' s inclination to reify "the chinese painter" and "chinese painting" as uniform, monolithic entities causes him to marshal evidence in support of his claims in a way that treats all source materials as equally applicable and relevant: the daodejing, an essay by an 1 l^-century court painter and a treatise by a qing dynasty monastic recluse are all grist for the mill, as if the contextual and historical differences between these sources were negligible and/or irrelevant.
36. title: the great migration: rural-urban migration in china and indonesia
authors: kenneth roberts.
abstract: after two decades of research on the largest migration in human history, the authors seek to contextualize this process by contrasting it with rural-urban migration in indonesia. [...] their carefully constructed data set offers the potential to study the evolution of this dynamic process over time from a variety of perspectives, much as the mexican migration project did for international migration from mexico to the united states.
37. title: the maoist urban state and crisis: comparing disaster management in the great tianjin flood in 1963 and the great leap forward famine
authors: lauri paltemaa.
abstract: even bureaus of the central government could resist policies designed at the center. because of such resistance, the term "fragmented authoritarianism" is used to describe the situation in which policy implementation was a long and negotiated process.20 however, when the central government really wanted something to be done, it could amass its resources and surmount all resistance.21 thus, campaigns also played a key role in overcoming the inertia of a fragmented and cellular sociopolitical system.22 in the case of the 1963 flood, the central and local governments relied on these same structures (work units and communes) which in normal times caused friction in policy implementation.
38. title: the politics of land development in urbanizing china
authors: sally sargeson.
abstract: [...] urban studies of china have surged, and the focus of inquiry has shifted from the city as a symbol of modernity and vector of governance and social differentiation to the city as a field of accumulation.1 particular attention has centered on the fiscal incentives motivating governments to expropriate land for development2 it is widely accepted now that land enclosure has become a key strategy of local government financing and urban capital accumulation. based on an analysis of several strong sources of evidence, including national and local statistical data and government documents, the 1996 national land survey, landsat and aerial photographic images taken in 1988 and 2000, and extensive field investigations in four provinces, lin makes a strong case for exploring land development in china through a comparative study of histories of policy implementation and land use in specific places, rather than through the application of a pre-conceived theoretical model.
39. title: the politics of rural reform in china: state policy and village predicament in the early 2000s
authors: lior rosenberg.
abstract: [...] this research fits well with the already-established understanding of rtfr, but this is also its achilles' heel.
40. title: the public sector in hong kong: government; policy; people
authors: john p burns.
abstract: the politically driven system emerged because the new hksar government sought to impose its agenda on public policy; civil society, now better organized and more powerful, could obstruct that agenda; and economic crises (such as the asian financial crisis and sars) created an environment of turbulence and uncertainty. in this view, the civil service dominates the rational domains while the political executive dominates (or at least contests) those domains of greatest concern to the public, opinion leaders and organized civil society.
41. title: the transition study of postsocialist china: an ethnographic study of a model community
authors: friederike fleischer.
abstract: if cucumber lane was a model community for realizing the socialist project, but the experiences of its residents broadly reflect those suggested in other studies of less prominent locales, what does this tell us about the power of the state in subject formation? despite these technicalities, ho's book offers an intriguing case study of urban residents' subjective experiences of socialism, especially because of the special history of the locale.
42. title: tradition revival with socialist characteristics: propaganda storytelling turned spiritual service in rural yan'an
authors: ka-ming wu.
abstract: duara has identified this sphere as a "cultural nexus of power" which, prior to the 20th century, the imperial authority endeavored to appropriate in order to legitimate its power.1 since the mid- 1940s, the chinese communist party (ccp) has actively reformed and appropriated this sphere to convey its revolutionary narrative and consolidate its ruling power.2 research to date has focused on the extensive transformation of folk cultural forms to cater to urban or tourist desires and to generate capital since the 1980s.3 some of the literature focuses specifically on how traditional cultural forms are revived in the rural communities to rebuild local identity and retrieve destroyed memories of the communal past,4 yet little attention is paid to the ways in which the political content and networks which informed these cultural forms during the socialist era have persisted in some degree. blending folk songs, ancient stories, village legends, monologues and local idioms, and accompanied by wooden clappers, pinewood boards and copper bells, a storytelling performance was "interlaced with songs, rhymes, mimicry, and body movement with dramatic effect".\n observing his interactions with local villagers, especially with the village party cadres or village leaders along the route, i also sensed that master xu's religious "ability" or his "localized religious knowledge" derived not only from the ritual tradition of northern shaanxi storytelling but also from his status as a state figure (gong/'iaren ...) and a recognized individual (shouren ...)
43. title: underground front: the chinese communist party in hong kong
authors: brian c h fong.
abstract: [...] although the ccp is widely regarded as a heavyweight player in shaping political development in hong kong, this topic has received little academic exploration.
44. title: working-class network society: communication technology and the information have-less in urban china
authors: jens damm.
abstract: the book also does not provide sufficient details of the socio-cultural and political background, and focuses too strongly on the new technologies alone. [...] qiu does not take into account the firm embeddedness of new technologies in policy-making processes, or forms and modes of governance.
45. title: xijiao cun: yige huabei nongzhuang de lishi bianqian (xijiao village: the historical transformation of a rural community in northern china)
authors: huaiyin li.
abstract: [...] among the many "village gazetteers" (cunzhi) and "village histories" (cunshi) that have been published in china in the past two decades, this book stands out for its rich detail and admirable faithfulness in reconstructing the local history.
46. title: xin faxian de zhou enlai (the newly discovered thou enlai)
authors: warren sun.
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