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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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 75 筆
... Foreign Policy and National Security 1. The People's Army: Serving Whose Interests? 17 June Teufel Dreyer September 1994 2. Uncertainty, Insecurity, and China's Military Power 27 Paul H. B. Godwin September 1997 3. Does China Have a ...
... foreign relations. China has joined the World Trade Organization, launched the Shanghai Cooperation Organization with Russia and the Central Asian states, started a free trade area with Southeast Asia, and has been a principal mover ...
... Foreign Policy and National Security, (2) Economic Policy and Social Issues, and (3) Domestic Politics and Governance. Many recent books on China have concentrated on either its economic or its domestic political and social changes ...
... Foreign Policy and National Security The transformation of Chinese foreign policy in the past three decades has been truly remarkable. As Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai passed from the scene in the mid-1970s, the Cultural Revolution was ...
... foreign policy was going to be more focused on Chinese interests than communist solidarity. The lowest point in Deng's rule took place in June 1989, when he ordered Chinese troops to clear Beijing's Tiananmen Square of protestors. The ...
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Economic Policy and Social Issues | 75 |
Domestic Politics and Governance | 135 |
Chronology of Recent Events | 217 |
About the Contributors | 243 |