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This title was first published in 2002. This two volume set
collects in a conveniently accessible form the most influential
articles by leading authorities in the study of China. It provides
an international reference work, combined with an authoritative
introduction by the editor.
In the 1990s, societies across the world were confronted with a
sudden mass inflow of Chinese migrants. This publication
investigates the global nature of Chinese migration by focusing on
one of the fastest growing groups of new Chinese international
migrants: those from Fujian province in southern China. It
specifically focuses on Fujianese migration to Europe, where a
broad range of immigration regimes has provided various incentives
and disincentives that have influenced Fujianese migratory patterns
across the continent. Applying intensive, multi-sited fieldwork
research in the UK, Hungary, Italy, as well as sending areas in
Fujian, the book investigates the origins and mechanics of recent
Chinese migration by focusing on the work and life of Fujianese
migrants in the United Kingdom, Hungary and Italy, and exploring
the many transnational spaces that connect Fujianese across Europe,
the United States and China.
Comparing migration in China itself to Chinese migration to Europe,
this book critically assesses received ideas, perceptions and
theories concerning internal and international migration.Comparing
migration in China itself to Chinese migration to Europe, this book
critically assesses received ideas, perceptions and theories
concerning internal and international migration. The book argues
for the emergence of a Chinese world system in which internal and
international mobility is a central and heterogenous feature. The
book presents an unusually rich case study of migration and
transnationalism of migrants from southern Zhejiang province in
Chinese and European cities, studies of rural-urban migration in
booming southern China, implementation of the birth control policy
among migrants in Beijing, discrimination and stereotypisation of
rural migrants in Shanghai, contract worker teams in Beijing, and
forced urban-rural migration during the Cultural Revolution.
First Published in 1996. This study is the outcome of eight-months'
fieldwork in Beijing, the capital of the People's Republic of China
(PRC), from 8 November 1988 to 17 June 1989. The original purpose
of the fieldwork had been to acquire a grass-roots perspective on
the dynamics of Chinese state socialist society under the impact of
ten years of reform. This was extended to include People's
Movement. The central questions this book therefore tries to answer
are: how can these two different fieldwork experiences be
reconciled with each other, and what do they tell us about the
dynamics of Chinese culture and society?
This title was first published in 2002. This two volume set
collects in a conveniently accessible form the most influential
articles by leading authorities in the study of China. It provides
an international reference work, combined with an authoritative
introduction by the editor.
The first book available devoted exclusively to China's rural
organizational change and the subsequent implications for rural
societies and politics. Following China's successful
decollectivization, diverse new organizational forms arose in
response to different local situations. Yet the collective
tradition did not die. The contributors dissect the closely
structured relationships among the newly emerging class of rural
entrepreneurs, local officials, and their family members and
associates.
First Published in 1996. This study is the outcome of eight-months'
fieldwork in Beijing, the capital of the People's Republic of China
(PRC), from 8 November 1988 to 17 June 1989. The original purpose
of the fieldwork had been to acquire a grass-roots perspective on
the dynamics of Chinese state socialist society under the impact of
ten years of reform. This was extended to include People's
Movement. The central questions this book therefore tries to answer
are: how can these two different fieldwork experiences be
reconciled with each other, and what do they tell us about the
dynamics of Chinese culture and society?
Comparing migration in China itself to Chinese migration to Europe, this book critically assesses received ideas, perceptions and theories concerning internal and international migration.
In the 1990s, societies across the world were confronted with a
sudden mass inflow of Chinese migrants. This publication
investigates the global nature of Chinese migration by focusing on
one of the fastest growing groups of new Chinese international
migrants: those from Fujian province in southern China. It
specifically focuses on Fujianese migration to Europe, where a
broad range of immigration regimes has provided various incentives
and disincentives that have influenced Fujianese migratory patterns
across the continent. Applying intensive, multisited fieldwork
research in the UK, Hungary, Italy, as well as sending areas in
Fujian, the book investigates the origins and mechanics of recent
Chinese migration by focusing on the work and life of Fujianese
migrants in the United Kingdom, Hungary and Italy, and exploring
the many transnational spaces that connect Fujianese across Europe,
the United States and China.
Contemporary China appears both deceptively familiar and
inexplicably different. China is a cauldron of forms of
entrepreneurship, social organization, ways of life and governance
that are at once new and unique, recognizably Chinese and
generically modern. In analyzing and interpreting these
developments, Frank N. Pieke adopts a China-centric perspective to
move beyond western preoccupations, desires, or fears. Each chapter
starts with a key question about China, showing that such questions
and assumptions are often based on a misunderstanding or
misconstruction of what China is today. Pieke explores
twenty-first-century China as a unique kind of neo-socialist
society, combining features of state socialism, neoliberal
governance, capitalism and rapid globalization. Understanding this
society not only helps us to know China better, but takes us beyond
the old dichotomies of West versus East, developed versus
developing, tradition versus modernity, democracy versus
dictatorship, and capitalism versus socialism.
Has China become just another capitalist country in a socialist
cloak? Will the Chinese Communist Party's rule survive the next ten
years of modernization and globalization? Frank Pieke investigates
these conundrums in this fascinating account of how government
officials are trained for placement in the Chinese Communist Party.
Through in-depth interviews with staff members and aspiring
trainees, he shows that while the Chinese Communist Party has
undergone a radical transformation since the revolutionary years
under Mao, it is still incumbent upon cadres, who are selected
through a highly rigorous process, to be ideologically and
politically committed to the party. It is the lessons learnt
through their teachers that shape the political and economic
decisions they will make in power. The book offers unique insights
into the structure and the ideological culture of the Chinese
government, and how it has reinvented itself over the last three
decades as a neo-socialist state.
Has China become just another capitalist country in a socialist
cloak? Will the Chinese Communist Party's rule survive the next ten
years of modernization and globalization? Frank Pieke investigates
these conundrums in this fascinating account of how government
officials are trained for placement in the Chinese Communist Party.
Through in-depth interviews with staff members and aspiring
trainees, he shows that while the Chinese Communist Party has
undergone a radical transformation since the revolutionary years
under Mao, it is still incumbent upon cadres, who are selected
through a highly rigorous process, to be ideologically and
politically committed to the party. It is the lessons learnt
through their teachers that shape the political and economic
decisions they will make in power. The book offers unique insights
into the structure and the ideological culture of the Chinese
government, and how it has reinvented itself over the last three
decades as a neo-socialist state.
The Chinese are among Europe's oldest immigrant communities, and
are now, in several countries, among the biggest and, economically,
the most powerful, drawing increasing interest from other ethnic
minorities, governments, and researchers. This volume opens up and
delineates this new field of European overseas Chinese studies,
reporting on pioneering research on the Chinese in Britain,
Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands,
Portugal, and Spain, and exploring the networks,
self-organizations, and migration patterns that are the fabric of
the Chinese community in Europe, together with the issues of
identity, language, integration, and community building that
Chinese throughout the continent face.
Home to a rapidly rising superpower and the two largest economies
in the world after the US, a global East Asia is seen and felt
everywhere. This dynamic text views the global square from the
perspective of the world's most important rising global center.
East Asia's global impact is built on a dizzying combination: a
strong and deep civilizational self-consciousness fused with
hypermodernity, wealth, influence, and power, which have made the
region a beacon for the world and an alternative to the West.
Short, accessible essays by prominent experts on the region cover
the core of East Asian-Japan, China, and Korea-as well as Mongolia
and Taiwan. Topics include contemporary culture, artistic
production, food, science, economic development, digital issues,
education and research, and international collaboration. Students
will glean new perspectives about the region using the insights of
global studies.
Contemporary China appears both deceptively familiar and
inexplicably different. China is a cauldron of forms of
entrepreneurship, social organization, ways of life and governance
that are at once new and unique, recognizably Chinese and
generically modern. In analyzing and interpreting these
developments, Frank N. Pieke adopts a China-centric perspective to
move beyond western preoccupations, desires, or fears. Each chapter
starts with a key question about China, showing that such questions
and assumptions are often based on a misunderstanding or
misconstruction of what China is today. Pieke explores
twenty-first-century China as a unique kind of neo-socialist
society, combining features of state socialism, neoliberal
governance, capitalism and rapid globalization. Understanding this
society not only helps us to know China better, but takes us beyond
the old dichotomies of West versus East, developed versus
developing, tradition versus modernity, democracy versus
dictatorship, and capitalism versus socialism.
Home to a rapidly rising superpower and the two largest economies
in the world after the US, a global East Asia is seen and felt
everywhere. This dynamic text views the global square from the
perspective of the world's most important rising global center.
East Asia's global impact is built on a dizzying combination: a
strong and deep civilizational self-consciousness fused with
hypermodernity, wealth, influence, and power, which have made the
region a beacon for the world and an alternative to the West.
Short, accessible essays by prominent experts on the region cover
the core of East Asian-Japan, China, and Korea-as well as Mongolia
and Taiwan. Topics include contemporary culture, artistic
production, food, science, economic development, digital issues,
education and research, and international collaboration. Students
will glean new perspectives about the region using the insights of
global studies.
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