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Ethnoregional Disparity, Ethnoterritoriality and Peripheral Nationalism: Socioracial Dilemmas in Contemporary China
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the pitfalls and prospects of further decentralization and contemplates the feasibility of the road beyond fiscal federalism in China, focusing on the involuted nexus between the challenges posed by central-peripheral conflicts, ethnoterritorial aspirations, income and wealth inequalities and interregional economic disparity exacerbated by the country's “retreat from equality” over the recent decades, the revival of old regionalisms, as well as the evolving role of the one-party State in the economy and society.
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Abstract: While Chinese economic reform in the recent decades has brought about stunning economic miracles, it also aggravated the problems of unemployment, poverty and inequality that continue to plague China in her politicosocioeconomic development into the new millennium, and with poverty having the properties of being concentrated in the western region and in the ethnic minority areas, ethnoregionalization of poverty inevitably ensues, presenting the country not only with economic challenges but also long-term sociopolitical uncertainties. Focusing on the involuted nexus between the challenges posed by central-peripheral conflicts, ethnoterritorial aspirations, income and wealth inequalities and interregional economic disparity exacerbated by the country’s “retreat from equality” over the recent decades, the revival of old regionalisms, the creation of new regionalisms brought about by increased local autonomy, as well as the evolving role of the one-party State in the economy and society, this paper proceeds to ponder the pitfalls and prospects of further decentralization and contemplates the feasibility of the road beyond fiscal federalism. While the alleviation of the multi-faceted problem of poverty in China is inevitably linked to the country’s regional and minority policies and hence may call for a stronger emphasis on the elements of decentralization and localization, the paper does caution that the same problem with its ethnoregional dimension may also add to decentralization the threat of centrifugal tendencies especially if decentralization leads to a politics of cutthroat competition instead of a decentralized politics of accommodation and the resultant provincial protectionism intensifies local particularism and precipitates secessionistic ethnogenesis or reethnicization.
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Literacy, Education and Economic Development in Contemporary China
Emile Kok-Kheng Yeoh,Kah-Mun Chu +1 more
TL;DR: Literacy has been conceptualized traditionally as having a major role in developing a nation as mentioned in this paper and people with good literacy skills enjoy a higher standard of living, have better opportunities of finding jobs, and are able to continue to learn new skills that will help them in the workplace.
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Stratification, Social Action and Morphogenesis: Structures and Agents in Contemporary China's Social Transformation
TL;DR: The authors examines contemporary China's social transformation as a phenomenon that is neither simple nor unidimensional, wherein social and in particular sociopolitical change could be said not to be a multiattribute concept, but a multiconcept construct.
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State Coercion and Civil Societal Response: Structure and Agency in the Development of Contemporary Chinese Dissent and Nonviolent Action
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors analyzed Chinese state-civil society relations with particular emphasis along the pathway of a state domination-NVA assertion nexus with due attention paid to its macro-micro linkages in particular from the interpretive perspective, taking into consideration the problem of structure and agency.
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China: Developmental Model, State-Civil Societal Interplay and Foreign Relations
Emile Kok-Kheng Yeoh
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the pitfalls and prospects of further decentralization and contemplates the feasibility of the road beyond fiscal federalism in China, focusing on the involuted nexus between the challenges posed by central-peripheral conflicts, ethnoterritorial aspirations, income and wealth inequalities and interregional economic disparity exacerbated by the country's “retreat from equality” over the recent decades, the revival of old regionalisms, as well as the evolving role of the one-party State in the economy and society.
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References
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Jürg Steiner
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TL;DR: The German edition of Steiner's masterful analysis of Switzerland's political system was first published in 1970 as Gewaltlose Politik und kulturelle Vielfalt, it was greeted by the American Political Science Review as a laudable departure from conventional comparative series.
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Creating the Zhuang: Ethnic Politics in China
Katherine Palmer Kaup
- 01 Jun 2000
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper revealed the unique culture of the Zhuang people, China's largest ethnic minority, and showed the Chinese Communist Party's skilful balancing of ethnic and regional loyalties during the second half of the 20th century to integrate the diversity of China's ethnic mosaic.
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Fiscal Decentralization in Developing Countries: Fiscal decentralization in developing countries: an overview
Richard M. Bird,François Vaillancourt +1 more
- 01 Mar 1999
TL;DR: In this article, the authors take stock of the progress, problems, and potentials of fiscal decentralization in developing countries by bringing together a set of studies from a variety of countries around the world.