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Dragons, Tigers, and Dogs is a tightly-focused collection of
studies that explores how Qing governing institutions and
strategies worked in actual practice to address the practical
problems and needs of a regionally diverse and culturally complex
empire from the seventeenth to the early twentieth centuries. It
highlights the Qing regime's ability to accommodate an astonishing
variety of local governing environments in the management of
short-term contingent crises and long-term evolutionary problems
caused by changes in the social-economic fabric of Greater China
during the Qing period. It argues that the Qing state should be
viewed as a system of indirect rule because of its accommodative
strategies of governance and its reliance on sub- and
extra-bureaucratic power groups at the local level. Dragons,
Tigers, and Dogs makes an important contribution to our
understanding of the practical operation of Qing government, and
its readability, thematic coherence, and inclusion of
professionally-drawn maps and enhanced Chinese woodblock
illustrations make this work attractive and accessible to students
of late imperial China as well as Qing specialists.
The studies in this collection re-examine the role of the Qing
state in the private economy. They show in a variety of cases how
the interaction between the two helped the state achieve its goals
of social stability and security while enhancing the prosperity of
private economic interests.
Dragons, Tigers, and Dogs is a tightly-focused collection of
studies that explores how Qing governing institutions and
strategies worked in actual practice to address the practical
problems and needs of a regionally diverse and culturally complex
empire from the seventeenth to the early twentieth centuries. It
highlights the Qing regime's ability to accommodate an astonishing
variety of local governing environments in the management of
short-term contingent crises and long-term evolutionary problems
caused by changes in the social-economic fabric of Greater China
during the Qing period. It argues that the Qing state should be
viewed as a system of indirect rule because of its accommodative
strategies of governance and its reliance on sub- and
extra-bureaucratic power groups at the local level. Dragons,
Tigers, and Dogs makes an important contribution to our
understanding of the practical operation of Qing government, and
its readability, thematic coherence, and inclusion of
professionally-drawn maps and enhanced Chinese woodblock
illustrations make this work attractive and accessible to students
of late imperial China as well as Qing specialists.
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