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"China Engages Global Health Governance" is the first book to
systematically examine China's participation in the global health
domain. It examines how and why China changed its stance on its
HIV/AIDS epidemic and investigates China's emerging role in
Africa's AIDS crisis and the controversial issue of access to
anti-retroviral drugs for the continent's impoverished people. In
scrutinizing China's evolving global role and its intentions for
global governance and global health governance, this book argues
that China is neither a system-defender nor a system-transformer of
the liberal international order. While acting in concert with other
major powers, China strives to defend itself from the encroachment
of liberal democratic values on the world stage. In order to carve
out some international space for itself and to fend off attacks by
the liberal normative structure, China calls for multilateral
cooperation in a "harmonious world." With the suggestion that there
is no universally applicable blueprint for development, Beijing
tries to shore up the principle of national sovereignty and
non-intervention and strengthen ties with developing countries to
consolidate a normative and political bulwark against liberal
democratic values. In short, China possesses a hybrid national
identity in its deepening engagement with global governance.
Xi Jinping has proven to be one of the most transformative
political leaders of the twenty-first century. After a long career
that began at the village level, he became General Secretary of the
Chinese Communist Party and China's paramount leader in 2012. Few
expected what would come next: a sweeping restructuring of China's
political economy and political culture which included
anti-corruption campaigns against the Party, and a full
recalibration of China's relations with the outside world. In Xi
Jinping, Alfred L. Chan offers a comprehensive account of his life
and times. Chan discusses Xi's early years as a "princeling" and
his ordeal during the tumultuous Cultural Revolution. Xi's
privileged childhood was shattered during his youth when he was
mercilessly tormented as a counter-revolutionary, declared a
juvenile delinquent and pauper, ultimately becoming an ordinary
peasant. But he clawed his way back up a ladder of success
reflecting the changing zeitgeist of the times. He entered politics
at age seventeen and accumulated administrative experiences at the
county and provincial levels. Chan documents Xi's long path upward
through the system, revealing how he built a reputation as an
astute leader and a corruption fighter. The second half of the book
focuses on the post-2012 period, and Chan pays particular attention
to the context surrounding Xi's governance once he consolidated
power. He makes clear that Xi's core guiding principle has been
Leninism, which prioritizes disciplined party rule above all else.
Throughout, Chan applies a range of social scientific theories
drawn from comparative politics, international relations theory,
public policy, and theories of governance to explain policymaking
during an era of turbulent changes. Sweeping in scope and
addressing virtually every aspect of Xi's life, this study will be
essential for anyone seeking to understand not just Xi himself, but
the overlapping global and domestic political contexts that shaped
his career and style of rule.
This fascinating study of China's Great Leap Forward documents how Mao Zedong dominated and manipulated the policy process. Through exhaustive research of newly-available materials, the author discusses how the central ministries and the province of Guangdong implemented radical policies such as the backyard furnace campaign and the establishment of the People's Communes. He also demonstrates how these authorities, hard-pressed by impossible assignments and production targets, were compelled to focus on the fantastic rituals of mass mobilization to keep up appearances.
The dynamics of healthcare are shifting the patient paradigm in
dramatic ways. The former patient is now both a consumer and a
customer. The mantra of this new consumer is "convenient, fast,
simple, and high value." Their expectations for healthcare are
similar to what they experience in other industries such as
transportation, banking, short-stay rental housing, retail shopping
online, same-day deliveries, and more. Smart mobile devices enable
the customer to conduct transactions at any place and at any time,
and without waiting in line. Healthcare providers need to offer
customer service experiences similar to Apple, Amazon, Nordstrom,
and other benchmark companies in order to stay competitive. The
mindset of the new patient-turned-consumer has fundamentally
shifted and there is no looking back. Anyone connected to
healthcare needs to learn the profiles of the new consumer, better
understand their behaviors, and comprehend their expectations as
customers who have a choice. The patient paradigm shifts tells you
everything a successful business needs to know about the powerful
new healthcare consumer.
This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This
IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced
typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have
occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor
pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original
artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe
this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections,
have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing
commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We
appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the
preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
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