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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: An Chen (National University of Singapore)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.720kg ISBN: 9781107081758ISBN 10: 1107081750 Pages: 406 Publication Date: 18 December 2014 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews'This is a thorough and comprehensive analysis of China's rural politics during the reform era. The author traces the effect of the dramatic changes - decollectivization, marketization, privatization, tax reforms - on the power and status of grassroots cadres. He argues that in major parts of rural China village cadres have lost both administrative as well as the redistributive power to allocate public good. The result has been a crisis of rural governance. The exception is a large group of new leaders who combine both entrepreneurial and political roles, but who also pose an implicit challenge to Party control. The book is the result of twelve years of research, using all applicable methods. The author deals skillfully with the increasing complexity of the rural political, economic, and social landscape. The rich detail of this excellent book will challenge readers but those who persist will be amply rewarded.' Thomas P. Bernstein, Columbia University 'Despite China's rapid economic development and urbanization, rural China continues to be home for more than half of the Chinese population. A keen and long-term observer of developments in rural China, An Chen has written a rich and insightful volume on how economic, financial and social changes have reshaped the nature of governance in rural China in the last twenty years. This book should be read by anyone interested in a better understanding of the foundations of Communist Party rule in China.' Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago 'A new entry to an old debate about marketization that draws together research on political economy and rural cadres to tell us much about 'governing capacity' in the Chinese countryside.' Kevin J. O'Brien, University of California, Berkeley 'For better and for worse, there is little governance in rural China. An Chen documents how abolishing onerous agricultural taxes has eroded - not restored - government authority, and how villagers disregard local officials with meagre resources while the officials ignore a central government that does little for them.' Samuel L. Popkin, University of California, San Diego 'This is a thorough and comprehensive analysis of China's rural politics during the reform era. The author traces the effect of the dramatic changes - decollectivization, marketization, privatization, tax reforms - on the power and status of grassroots cadres. He argues that in major parts of rural China village cadres have lost both administrative as well as the redistributive power to allocate public good. The result has been a crisis of rural governance. The exception is a large group of new leaders who combine both entrepreneurial and political roles, but who also pose an implicit challenge to Party control. The book is the result of twelve years of research, using all applicable methods. The author deals skillfully with the increasing complexity of the rural political, economic, and social landscape. The rich detail of this excellent book will challenge readers but those who persist will be amply rewarded.' Thomas P. Bernstein, Columbia University 'Despite China's rapid economic development and urbanization, rural China continues to be home for more than half of the Chinese population. A keen and long-term observer of developments in rural China, An Chen has written a rich and insightful volume on how economic, financial and social changes have reshaped the nature of governance in rural China in the last twenty years. This book should be read by anyone interested in a better understanding of the foundations of Communist Party rule in China.' Dali L. Yang, University of Chicago 'A new entry to an old debate about marketization that draws together research on political economy and rural cadres to tell us much about 'governing capacity' in the Chinese countryside.' Kevin J. O'Brien, University of California, Berkeley 'For better and for worse, there is little governance in rural China. An Chen documents how abolishing onerous agricultural taxes has eroded - not restored - government authority, and how villagers disregard local officials with meagre resources while the officials ignore a central government that does little for them.' Samuel L. Popkin, University of California, San Diego 'In The Transformation of Governance in Rural China, An Chen provides a persuasive and insightful study on the evolving nature of rural governance in China, based on extensive date.' The Journal of Asian Studies Author InformationAn Chen (PhD, Yale University) is Associate Professor of Political Science at the National University of Singapore and a former Senior Research Fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He is the author of Restructuring Political Power in China: Alliances and Opposition, 1978-1998 (1999). His recent publications have appeared in Politics and Society, Political Science Quarterly, Modern Asian Studies, China Quarterly, Modern China, Democratization, the Journal of Democracy, and the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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