Synopses & Reviews
Global Studies is a unique series designed to provide comprehensive background information and selected world press articles on the regions and countries of the world. Each Global Studies volume includes an annotated listing of World Wide Web sites and is now supported by an online Instructor's Resource Guide. Visit our website for more information: www.mhhe.com/globalstudies
About the Author
Ph.D., University of South Carolina (Political Science), August 2003 M.A., Indiana State University (Political Science), May 1997 Professional (graduate) Training, Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania, 1994-5 B.A., Shanghai International Studies University (English Language & Literature), 1988 OTHER ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES 09/2005 – present Manuscript Reviewer, Congressional Quarterly (CQ) Press 04/2005 – present Listed on the website of the International Studies Associations International Political Economy scholar 09/2004 – present 09/2004 – present 09/2004 – present Advisory Board Member, Chinese Cultures Abroad Directory. 08/2003 – present Manuscript Reviewer, Prentice Hall / Pearson Education. 05/2002 – present Guest Research Associate, Shanghai Institute of American Studies, Shanghai, China. 01/2000 – present Manuscript/Book Reviewer, Journal of Chinese Political Science (U.S.A.) 05/1999 Member, Delegation of the Association of Chinese Political Studies (U.S.A.) to Taiwan. 07/1995 Participant, Scholar Orientation Program (SOP), the National Committee on United States-China Relations, New York City. EXPERIENCE IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE 07/1991 – 07/1994 Chief Assistant to the Consul for Press and Cultural Affairs, American Consulate General in Shanghai, the Peoples Republic of China. 09/1988 – 06/1991 Secretary for International Cooperation, Shanghai International Studies University
Table of Contents
Preliminary Table of Contents Global Studies: China, 14e
Introduction
Selected World Wide Web Sites
U.S. Statistics and Map
Canada Statistics and Map
World Map
China Map
China (People's Republic of China)
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Map
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
Taiwan Map
Taiwan
Articles from the World Press
China Articles
1. Think Again: China, Harry Harding, Foreign Policy, March/April 2007. It's often said that China is walking a tightrope: Its economy depends on foreign money, its leadership is set in its ways, and its military expansion threatens the world. But the Middle Kingdom's immediate dangers run deeper than you realize.
2. Think Again: China's Military, Drew Thompson, Foreign Policy, March/April 2010. Is China's military a growing threat? Will China's "one child" generation weaken its military? Does China's military have global aspirations? A closer look at the world's largest armed forces.
3. The China Model, Rowan Callick, The American, November/December 2007. Economic freedom plus tight political control–this Chinese model seems to be displacing the "Washington Consensus" and winning fans from regimes across Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America. One wonders, for how long?
4. China: A Threat to or Threatened by Democracy?, Edward Friedman, Dissent, Winter 2009. How can one know whether China will or will not democratize? China has already evolved politically into a non-Stalinist authoritarianism. Joined by its authoritarian friends, China is well on the way to defeating the global forces of democracy.
5. Is China Afraid of Its Own People?, Will Lam, Foreign Policy, September 2010. The diplomatic tussle over the East China Sea has calmed down, but a bigger foreign-policy problem waits: China's newly empowered masses won't take "no" for an answer, and Beijing is right to be scared.
6. Five Reasons Why China Will Rule Tech, Patrick Thibodeau, Computerworld, July 2010. China's focus on science and technology is relentless, and it's occurring at all levels of its society. There are five reasons why China may succeed in its goal to achieve world dominance in technology.
7. How Being Big Helps and Hinders China, David Pilliing, Financial Times, October 2010. China's size has been crucial in getting it this far. Its seemingly limitless supply of cheap labor was a magnet for foreign investment and technology. Now, its potentially endless queues of shoppers are having the same effect.
8. China's Team of Rivals, Cheng Li, Foreign Policy, March/April 2009. A financial meltdown promises to test the Communist Party's power in ways not seen since Tiananmen. But theirs is a house divided, as prince lings take on populists and Pekinologists try to make sense of it all.
9. China Offers Direct Line to its Leaders, Kathrin Hille, Financial Times, September 2010. The Communist Party has initiated a new PR strategy to invite Chinese citizens to email party leaders now as a way to improve the party's image and shape public opinions.
10. China's Political Awakening?, Minxin Pei, The Diplomat, July 2010. Labor activism is one of the many signs of a broader political re-awakening in Chinese civil society. The Communist Party is governing a different country, where the old rules no longer apply.
11. China's Complicit Capitalists, Kellee S. Tsai, Far Eastern Economic Review, January/February 2008. There are over 29 million private businesses while employ over 200 million people and generate two-thirds of China's industrial output. Will China's growing capitalist class overthrow the Communist Party and demand democracy based on the principle of "no taxation without representation"?
12. Bye Bye Cheap Labor, Alexandra Harney, Far Eastern Economic Review, March 2008. Higher taxes, a new labor law and the growing demands of China's increasingly sophisticated workers are forcing manufacturers either up the value chain or toward the exits.
13. China's New Export: Farmers, Clifford Coonan, The Independent, December 2008. China has a shortage of land, Africa a shortage of food. Chinese farmers have moved to Africa to expand this mutually beneficial relationship.
14. Beijing's Windy Bet, David Cyranoski, Nature, January 2009. After spurning wind power, China has swung around and embraced this clean energy. But the nation's love affair with wind may be spinning out of control.
15. China Winning Renewable Energy Race, Steve Hargreaves, CNN, September 2010. China has already surpassed the U.S. in the amount of wind turbines and solar panels that it makes. China is also gaining on the U.S. when it comes to how much of their energy comes from renewable energy sources.
16. Mania on the Mainland, Dexter Roberts, Bloomberg Businessweek, January 2010. Chinese who have the money are desperately snapping up apartments for fear prices will rise further. Think the U.S. real estate bubble was bad? China's could be worse.
17. China's Reform Era Legal Odyssey, Jerome A. Cohen, Far Eastern Economic Review, December 2008. 30 years ago, China was a legal shambles. China is still building a healthy legal system. It may take another 30 years to see significant improvements.
18. China's Final Frontier, Sophie Elmhirst, New Statesman, February 2009. The Chinese are latecomers to space, and desperate to catch up. Like it or not, the space race with the U.S. has begun.
19. China's Land Reform: Speeding the Plough, Tom Orlik/Scott Rozelle, Far Eastern Economic Review, November 2008. Neither farmers nor migrants are yet able to participate fully in the benefits of China's ongoing modernization. Nothing can benefit the 700 million strong rural population more than land reform.
20. The PRC: Plastic Republic of China, Katherine Zhu/Megan Zhao, ABC News, August 2010. Cosmetic surgeries can boost job prospects and self-esteem for women. China records the highest number of plastic surgeries in Asia now.
21. Chinese Acquire Taste for French Wine, Patti Waldmeir, Financial Times, September 2010. China overtook the UK and Germany to become the top export market for Bordeaux wine in 2010. Wine consumption habits are becoming more sophisticated in China.
22. China Won't Revalue the Yuan, John Lee, Foreign Policy, September 2010. No amount of pressure or hectoring by the West is going to change the calculus of Chinese leaders. An undervalued currency may be critical to their very survival.
23. China's Unbalanced Growth has Served it Well, Yukon Huang, Financial Times, October 2010. With both GDP and consumption increasing rapidly, why should China give up its unbalanced growth approach? The major concern is rather whether its high levels of investment will continue to generate adequate returns or are sustainable in a broader sense.
24. China Will not be the World's Deputy Sheriff, David Pilling, Financial Times, January 2010. The world expects a lot from China these days, but China is not ready, or willing, to take up the leadership role. It prefers to keep a low profile and continue to build its economy.
25. China Extends Trade with Iran, Najmeh Bozorgmehr, Financial Times, February 2010. China has overtaken the EU to become Iran's largest trading partner, which underlines China's reluctance to agree to any further economic sanctions on Iran.
26. Africa Builds as Beijing Scrambles to Invest, David Pilling, Financial Times, December 2009. It would be wrong to be wide-eyed about China's investments. Whatever its side-effects, a scramble to invest in Africa has got to be better than the European precedent–a scramble to carve it up.
27. A New China Requires a New US Strategy, David Shambaugh, Current History, September 2010. The United States needs to revise its China strategy to deal with a complex new China. The worst thing Washington could do is to operate on autopilot, to assume that past strategies and policies are ipso facto indefinitely useful.
Taiwan and Hong Kong Articles
28. China and Taiwan Sign Landmark Deal, Robin Kwong, Financial Times, June 2010. The Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) is the centerpiece of Ma Ying-jeou's effort to mend relations with mainland China. Taiwan hopes the deal will also smooth the path to sign free trade agreements with other key trading partners.
29. Beijing and Taiwan Try Their Hand at Détente, Sandra Schulz, Spiegel Online, July 2008. Both Beijing and Taipei seem to understand that "soft power" carries more influence than "hard" military power. Part of the reconciliation stems from strong cultural and business ties as well as Taiwan relaxing its stance on "national" labels.
30. Who's Listening to Taiwan's People?, Julian Baum, Far Eastern Economic Review, November 2009. As President Ma Ying-jeou pursues an ambitious agenda that will require more accommodations with Beijing, he will need to deal with the popular affirmation of Taiwanese identity.
31. Behind the Dalai Lama's Taiwan Visit, Julian Baum, Far Eastern Economic Review, September 2009. For Taiwan's separatist opposition, the Dalai Lama visit was a political coup. Taiwan is open, Democratic and practices freedom of religion. In some aspects, Taiwan exemplifies what Tibetans would like China to be.
32. Taiwan Caters to China's Giant Fish Appetite, Robin Kwong, Financial Times, September 2010. The China-Taiwan trade deal opens the door for Taiwanese grouper farmers, typically small family businesses, to develop into bigger companies by entering new markets such as supplying frozen fish to inland Chinese provinces.
33. Wen Hints at Scrapping Taiwan-facing Missiles, Robin Kwong, Financial Times, September 2010. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has for the first time raised the possibility of removing some of the thousand-plus missiles the PLA has deployed facing Taiwan.
34. Hong Kong Closes in on Financial Top Spot, Brooke Masters, Financial Times, September 2010. London and New York are still the world's leading cities for banking and other financial services, but Hong Kong is breathing down their necks.
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index