China: Contemporary Political, Economic, and International AffairsDavid B. H. Denoon NYU Press, 2007年4月1日 - 245 頁 China’s dramatic transformation over the past fifteen years has drawn its share of attention and fear from the global community and world leaders. Far from the inward-looking days of the Cultural Revolution, modern China today is the world’s fourth largest economy, with a net product larger than that of France and the United Kingdom. And China’s dynamism is by no means limited to its economy: enrollments in secondary and higher education are rapidly expanding, and new means of communication are vastly increasing information available to the Chinese public. In two decades, the Chinese government has also transformed its foreign relations—Beijing is now consulted on virtually every key development within the region. However, the Communist Party of China still dominates all aspects of political life. The Politburo is still self-selecting, Beijing chooses province governors, censorship is widespread, and treatment of dissidents remains harsh. |
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... Soviet threat and not necessarily a sign of a broad, sweeping opening to the West. Once Deng Xiaoping consolidated his power in 1978, however, the changes came in quick succession. Deng phased out communes in China's rural areas and ...
... Soviet Union in the past. China has also acquired military technology from Israel, sometimes against Washington's wishes. The People's Republic was reportedly using Patriot missile technology sold to it by Israel to upgrade Soviet ...
... Soviet split of 1959–1960 and Moscow's termination of military assistance, China's military power had eroded into obsolescence. The country's defense industrial base was inca- pable of producing anything more than copies of Soviet ...
... Soviet Union in 1990, and upheld by Russia after the Soviet Union's disintegration, was viewed as potentially revitalizing China's defense industrial base in addition to providing advanced weaponry. Finally, in the early 1990s ...
... Soviet Union no longer exists to threaten Japan and its security ties with the United States are politically strong. Further heightening Beijing's insecurity is the fact that the PLA and Japan's SDF began their modernization programs at ...
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Economic Policy and Social Issues | 75 |
Domestic Politics and Governance | 135 |
Chronology of Recent Events | 217 |
About the Contributors | 243 |