1.
Mitter, R.: A bitter revolution: China’s struggle with the modern world. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2004).
2.
Saich, T.: Governance and politics of China. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2011).
3.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S.: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
4.
Callahan, W.A.: China dreams: 20 visions of the future. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013).
5.
Callahan, W.A.: Cultural governance and resistance in Pacific Asia. Routledge, London (2006).
6.
Perry, E.J., Selden, M.: Chinese society: change, conflict and resistance. Routledge, Abingdon (2010).
7.
Blecher, M.J.: China against the tides: restructuring through revolution, radicalism and reform. Continuum, London (2010).
8.
Dreyer, J.T.: China’s political system: modernization and tradition. Pearson, Boston (2015).
9.
Lieberthal, K.: Governing China: from revolution through reform. W. W. Norton, New York, N.Y. (2004).
10.
Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden. Documentatiecentrum voor het Huidige China: China information: Zhongguo qing bao. (1986).
11.
Australian National University. Contemporary China Centre, JSTOR (Organization), Thomson Gale (Firm): The China journal: Chung-kuo yen chiu. (1995).
12.
Congress for Cultural Freedom, International Association for Cultural Freedom, University of London. Contemporary China Institute, University of London. School of Oriental and African Studies, Cambridge University Press, JSTOR (Organization), William S. Hein & Company: The China quarterly. (1960).
13.
Center for Modern China: Journal of contemporary China: Dang dai Zhongguo.
14.
JSTOR (Organization), Thomson Gale (Firm): Modern China. (1975).
15.
Financial Times Limited: The financial times.
17.
Asian Development Bank, http://www.adb.org/.
18.
United Nations in China, http://www.un.org.cn/.
19.
World Bank in China, http://www.worldbank.org.cn/.
20.
The Carter Center, http://www.cartercenter.org/index.html.
21.
China Dialogue, https://www.chinadialogue.net/.
22.
China Leadership Monitor, http://www.hoover.org/publications/china-leadership-monitor.
23.
China News Digest, http://my.cnd.org/modules/news/index.php?&sel_lang=english&storytopic=2.
24.
Chinese Human Rights Web, http://www.chinesehumanrightsreader.org/.
25.
Human Rights China, http://www.chinahumanrights.org/.
26.
Human Rights Watch | Asia, https://www.hrw.org/asia.
27.
China Environment Forum | Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars, https://www.wilsoncenter.org/program/china-environment-forum?fuseaction=Topics.home&topic_id=1421.
28.
China.org, http://www.china.org.cn/.
29.
China Daily | European, http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/.
30.
National Bureau of Statistics of China, http://www.stats.gov.cn/english/.
31.
People’s Daily Online | English, http://en.people.cn/.
32.
Xinhua News Agency, http://www.chinaview.cn/.
33.
Saich, T.: Governance and politics of China. Palgrave, London (2015).
34.
Saich, T.: Governance and politics of China. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2004).
35.
Dreyer, J.T.: China’s political system: modernization and tradition. Pearson, Boston (2015).
36.
Mitter, R.: A bitter revolution: China’s struggle with the modern world. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2004).
37.
Goldman, M., Gordon, A.: Historical perspectives on contemporary East Asia. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA (2000).
38.
Spence, J.D.: The search for modern China. W.W. Norton & Company, New York (1999).
39.
Fairbank, J.K., Goldman, M.: China: a new history. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1998).
40.
Callahan, W.A.: China dreams: 20 visions of the future. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013).
41.
Intellectuals Divided: The Growing Political and Ideological Debate in China | Brookings Institution, http://www.brookings.edu/events/2011/09/14-china-intellectuals.
42.
Hicks, G., Motofumi, A.: The broken mirror: China after Tiananmen. Longman, Harlow (1990).
43.
Fewsmith, J.: China since Tiananmen: the politics of transition. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001).
44.
Davies, G.: Worrying about China: the language of Chinese critical inquiry. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2009).
45.
Duara, P.: The global and regional in China’s nation-formation. Routledge, London (2009).
46.
Breslin, S.: China and the global political economy. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2007).
47.
Lin, C.: The transformation of Chinese socialism. Duke University Press, Durham, N.C. (2006).
48.
Bianco, L., Bell, M.: Origins of the Chinese revolution, 1915-1949. Stanford University Press, Stanford [Calif.] (1971).
49.
Johnson, C.A.: Peasant nationalism and communist power: the emergence of revolutionary China, 1937-1945. Stanford University Press, Stanford (1962).
50.
Lieberthal, K.: Governing China: from revolution through reform. W. W. Norton, New York, N.Y. (2004).
51.
Dreyer, J.T.: China’s political system: modernization and tradition. Longman, Boston, MA (2012).
52.
Saich, T., Van de Ven, H.J., Apter, D.E.: New perspectives on the Chinese Communist revolution. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1995).
53.
Gray, J.: Rebellions and revolutions: China from the 1800s to the 1980s. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1990).
54.
Fenby, J.: The Penguin history of modern China: the fall and rise of a great power, 1850-2008. Allen Lane, London (2008).
55.
Clark, P.: The Chinese Cultural Revolution: a history. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
56.
Blecher, M.J.: China against the tides: restructuring through revolution, radicalism and reform. Continuum, London (2010).
57.
Jenner, W.J.F.: The tyranny of history: the roots of China’s crisis. Penguin Books, London (1994).
58.
Grasso, J.M., Corrin, J.P., Kort, M.: Modernization and revolution in China: from the Opium Wars to the Olympics. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2009).
59.
Zhao, S.: A state-led nationalism: The patriotic education campaign in post-Tiananmen China. Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 31, 287–302 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-067X(98)00009-9.
60.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Dawson Books: State and society in 21st century China: crisis, contention, and legitimation. RoutledgeCurzon, New York (2004).
61.
Callahan, W.A.: History, identity, and security: Producing and consuming nationalism in China. Critical Asian Studies. 38, 179–208 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/14672710600671087.
62.
Duara, P.: The global and regional in China’s nation-formation. Routledge, London (2009).
63.
Guo, Y.: Cultural nationalism in contemporary China: the search for national identity under reform. Routledge, London (2004).
64.
Zhao, S.: China’s Pragmatic Nationalism: Is It Manageable? The Washington Quarerly. 29, (2005).
65.
Gries, P.H.: China’s new nationalism: pride, politics, and diplomacy. University of California Press, Berkeley, [Calif.] (2004).
67.
Hughes, C.R.: Chinese nationalism in the global era. Routledge, New York (2006).
68.
Callahan, W.A.: National Insecurities: Humiliation, Salvation, and Chinese Nationalism. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political. 29, 199–218 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1177/030437540402900204.
69.
Qingguo, J.: Disrespect and Distrust: the external origins of contemporary Chinese nationalism. Journal of Contemporary China. 14, 11–21 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/1067056042000300754.
70.
Zhao, S.: A nation-state by construction: dynamics of modern Chinese nationalism. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (2004).
71.
Yongming, Z.: Informed Nationalism: military websites in Chinese cyberspace. Journal of Contemporary China. 14, 543–562 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560500115481.
72.
Callahan, W.A.: Contingent states: greater China and transnational relations. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2004).
73.
Thornton, P.M.: Disciplining the state: virtue, violence, and state-making in modern China. Harvard University Asia Center, Cambridge, Mass (2007).
74.
Harrison, H.: The making of the Republican citizen: political ceremonies and symbols in China, 1911-1929. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
75.
Anderson, B.R.O., American Council of Learned Societies: Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. Verso, London (2006).
76.
Thongchai Winichakul: Siam mapped: a history of the geo-body of a nation. University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu (1994).
77.
Lieberthal, K.: Governing China: from revolution through reform. W. W. Norton, New York, N.Y. (2004).
78.
Saich, T.: Governance and politics of China. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2015).
79.
Li, C.: The Battle for China’s Top Nine Leadership Posts. The Washington Quarterly. 35, 131–145 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/0163660X.2012.642788.
80.
Creemers, R.: China’s Constitutionalism Debate: Content, Context and Implications. The China Journal. 74, (2015). https://doi.org/10.1086/681661.
81.
Shambaugh, D.L.: China’s Communist Party: atrophy & adaptation. University of California Press, Berkeley (2008).
82.
Shambaugh, D.L.: The modern Chinese state. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2000).
83.
Lowell Dittmer: The Changing Shape of Elite Power Politics. The China Journal. 53–67 (2001).
84.
Callahan, W.A.: Who is Xi Jinping, and where will he lead China? Open Democracy. (2012).
85.
Duckett, J.: China’s Leadership Transition. Political Insight. 3, 22–25 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2041-9066.2012.00108.x.
86.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
87.
Feng Chen: The Dilemma of Eudaemonic Legitimacy in Post-Mao China. Polity. 29, 421–439 (1997).
88.
Schubert, G.: One-Party Rule and the Question of Legitimacy in Contemporary China: preliminary thoughts on setting up a new research agenda. Journal of Contemporary China. 17, 191–204 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560701693153.
89.
Li Cheng: Jiang Zemin’s Successors: The Rise of the Fourth Generation of Leaders in the PRC. The China Quarterly. 1–40 (2000).
90.
Stanley Rosen: The Chinese Communist Party and Chinese Society: Popular Attitudes Toward Party Membership and the Party’s Image. The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs. 51–92 (1990).
91.
Tobin, D.: Reasonably Raging: China’s Divided Leadership, China’s Divided Society, http://reasonablyraging.blogspot.co.uk/2012/11/chinas-divided-leadership-chinas.html.
92.
Weatherley, R.: Politics in China since 1949: legitimizing authoritarian rule. Routledge, London (2006).
93.
Lieberthal, K.: Governing China: from revolution through reform. W. W. Norton, New York, N.Y. (2004).
94.
Saich, T.: Governance and politics of China. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2011).
95.
Tony Saich ,: China in 2005: Hu’s in Charge. Asian Survey. 46, 37–48 (2006).
96.
Saich, T.: China’s new leadership: The challenges to the politics of muddling through. Current history. 101, 250–255 (2002).
97.
Burns, J.P.: The Chinese Communist Party’s Nomenklatura system: a documentary study of party control of leadership selection, 1979-1984. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1989).
98.
Burns, J.P.: Strengthening Central CCP Control of Leadership Selection: The 1990 Nomenklatura. The China Quarterly. 138, (1994). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741000035840.
99.
Hon S. Chan: Cadre Personnel Management in China: The Nomenklatura System, 1990-1998. The China Quarterly. 703–734 (2004).
100.
Morduch, J., Sicular, T.: Politics, growth, and inequality in rural China: does it pay to join the Party? Journal of Public Economics. 77, 331–356 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0047-2727(99)00121-8.
101.
Zweig, D.: Freeing China’s farmers: rural restructuring in the reform era. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, NY (1997).
102.
Zhou, K.X.: How the farmers changed China: power of the people. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1996).
103.
Kelliher, D.R.: Peasant power in China: the era of rural reform, 1979-1989. Yale University Press, New Haven (1992).
104.
Blecher, M.J.: China against the tides: restructuring through revolution, radicalism and reform. Continuum, London (2010).
105.
Dreyer, J.T.: China’s political system: modernization and tradition. Longman, Boston, MA (2012).
106.
Fewsmith, J., Dawson Books: China since Tiananmen: from Deng Xiaoping to Hu Jintao. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
107.
Gittings, J.: The changing face of China: from Mao to market. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005).
108.
MacFarquhar, R.: The politics of China: the eras of Mao and Deng. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
109.
Gray, J.: Rebellions and revolutions: China from the 1800s to the 1980s. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1990).
110.
Spence, J.D.: The search for modern China. W.W. Norton & Company, New York (1999).
111.
White, G.: Riding the tiger: the politics of economic reform in post-Mao China. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1993).
112.
MacFarquhar, R., Schoenhals, M.: Mao’s last revolution. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2006).
113.
Lieberthal, K.: Governing China: from revolution through reform. W. W. Norton, New York, N.Y. (2004).
114.
Saich, T.: Governance and politics of China. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2011).
115.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
116.
Nathan, A.J., Gilley, B.: China’s new rulers: the secret files. New York Review of Books, New York, N.Y. (2003).
117.
Benewick, R., Wingrove, P.: China in the 1990s. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1999).
118.
Teiwes, F.C., Sun, W.: The end of the Maoist era: Chinese politics during the twilight of the Cultural Revolution, 1972-1976. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2007).
119.
Dickson, B.J.: Wealth into power: the Communist Party’s embrace of China’s private sector. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
120.
Fewsmith, J., Dawson Books: China since Tiananmen: from Deng Xiaoping to Hu Jintao. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
121.
Lowell Dittmer: Leadership Change and Chinese Political Development. The China Quarterly. 903–925 (2003).
122.
Bruce Gilley: The ‘End of Politics’ in Beijing. The China Journal. 115–135 (2004).
123.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
124.
Zhong, Y.: Local government and politics in China: challenges from below. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2003).
125.
Zheng, Y., Fewsmith, J.: China’s opening society: the non-state sector and governance. Routledge, London (2008).
126.
Landry, P.F.: Decentralized authoritarianism in China: the Communist Party’s control of local elites in the post-Mao era. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
127.
Diamant, N.J., Lubman, S.B., O’Brien, K.J.: Engaging the law in China: state, society, and possibilities for justice. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA (2005).
128.
Munro, N.: Connections, paperwork or passivity: strategies of popular engagement with the Chinese bureaucracy. The China Journal. 68, (2012).
129.
Peerenboom, R.: A Government of Laws: Democracy, rule of law and administrative law reform in the PRC. Journal of Contemporary China. 12, 45–67 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560305468.
130.
Peerenboom, R.P.: China’s long march toward rule of law. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2002).
131.
Yang, D.L., Zhao, L.: China’s reforms at 30: challenges and prospects. World Scientific, New Jersey (2009).
132.
Dreyer, J.T.: China’s political system: modernization and tradition. Longman, Boston, MA (2012).
133.
Finkelstein, D.M., Kivlehan, M.: China’s leadership in the 21st century: the rise of the fourth generation. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2003).
134.
Howell, J.: Governance in China. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, Md (2004).
135.
Yang, D.L.: Remaking the Chinese leviathan: market transition and the politics of governance in China. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (2004).
136.
Brandt, L., Rawski, T.G.: China’s great economic transformation. , Cambridge (2008).
137.
Chan, K.W.: The Chinese Hukou System at 50. Eurasian Geography and Economics. 50, 197–221 (2009). https://doi.org/10.2747/1539-7216.50.2.197.
138.
Solinger, D.J., American Council of Learned Societies: Contesting citizenship in urban China: peasant migrants, the state, and the logic of the market. University of California Press, Berkeley (1999).
139.
Anagnost, A.: From ‘Class’ to ‘Social Strata’: grasping the social totality in reform-era China. Third World Quarterly. 29, 497–519 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436590801931488.
140.
Marc J. Blecher: Hegemony and Workers’ Politics in China. The China Quarterly. 283–303 (2002).
141.
Rodrik, D.: In search of prosperity: analytic narratives on economic growth. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ (2003).
142.
Blecher, M.J.: China against the tides: restructuring through revolution, radicalism and reform. Continuum, London (2010).
143.
Brandt, L., Rawski, T.G.: China’s great economic transformation. , Cambridge (2008).
144.
Wu, J.: Understanding and interpreting Chinese economic reform. Thomson South-Western, Mason, OH (2005).
145.
Chan, C.K., Ngok, K.L., Phillips, D.: Social policy in China: development and well-being. Policy Press, Bristol, U.K. (2008).
146.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
147.
Yang, D.L., Zhao, L.: China’s reforms at 30: challenges and prospects. World Scientific, New Jersey (2009).
148.
Gustafsson, B., Li, S., Sicular, T.: Inequality and public policy in China. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
149.
Fei-Ling Wang: Reformed Migration Control and New Targeted People: China’s Hukou System in the 2000s. The China Quarterly. 115–132 (2004).
150.
Kam Wing Chan and Li Zhang: The Hukou System and Rural-Urban Migration in China: Processes and Changes. The China Quarterly. 818–855 (1999).
151.
Cheng, T., Selden, M.: The Origins and Social Consequences of China’s Hukou System. The China Quarterly. 139, (1994). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741000043083.
152.
Where do you live? | The Economist, http://www.economist.com/node/18832092.
153.
Pun Ngai and Lu Huilin: Unfinished Proletarianization: Self, Anger, and Class Action among the Second Generation of Peasant-Workers in Present-Day China. Modern China. 36, 493–519 (2010).
154.
Gu, E.X.: From permanent employment to massive lay-offs: the political economy of ‘transitional unemployment’ in urban China (1993–8). Economy and Society. 28, 281–299 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1080/03085149900000006.
155.
Unger, J.: The transformation of rural China. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2002).
156.
Chan, K.W.: Cities with invisible walls: reinterpreting urbanization in post-1949 China. Oxford University Press, Hong Kong (1994).
157.
Chan, K.W.: The Global Financial Crisis and Migrant Workers in China: ‘There is No Future as a Labourer; Returning to the Village has No Meaning’. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research. 34, 659–677 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2427.2010.00987.x.
158.
Davin, D.: Internal migration in contemporary China. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1999).
159.
Fan, C.C.: China on the move: migration, the state, and the household. Routledge, London (2008).
160.
Daniel Goodkind,Loraine A. West: China’s floating population: definitions, data and recent findings. Urban Studies. 39, (2002).
161.
Hare, D.: ‘Push’ versus ‘pull’ factors in migration outflows and returns: Determinants of migration status and spell duration among China’s rural population. Journal of Development Studies. 35, 45–72 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1080/00220389908422573.
162.
Knight, J., Song, L., Huaibin, J.: Chinese rural migrants in urban enterprises: Three perspectives. Journal of Development Studies. 35, 73–104 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1080/00220389908422574.
163.
Li, B.: Floating Population or Urban Citizens? Status, Social Provision and Circumstances of Rural-Urban Migrants in China. Social Policy and Administration. 40, 174–195 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9515.2006.00483.x.
164.
Zai Liang: The age of migration in China. Population and Development Review. 27, (2001).
165.
Liang, Z., Ma, Z.: China’s Floating Population: New Evidence from the 2000 Census. Population and Development Review. 30, 467–488 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1728-4457.2004.00024.x.
166.
Callahan, W.A.: Cultural governance and resistance in Pacific Asia. Routledge, London (2006).
167.
Goodman, D.S.G.: The new rich in China: future rulers, present lives. Routledge, London (2008).
168.
Huang, Y.: Capitalism with Chinese characteristics: entrepreneurship and the state. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
169.
Leung, J.C.B.: The emergence of social assistance in China. International Journal of Social Welfare. 15, 188–198 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2397.2006.00434.x.
170.
Shang, X., Wu, X.: Changing Approaches of Social Protection: Social Assistance Reform in Urban China. Social Policy and Society. 3, 259–271 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1474746404001770.
171.
Dorothy J. Solinger: Research Report: Why We Cannot Count the ‘Unemployed’. The China Quarterly. 671–688 (2001).
172.
Jane Duckett: Bureaucratic interests and institutions in the making of China’s social policy. Public Administration Quarterly. 27, 210–237 (2003).
173.
Mark W. Frazier: China’s Pension Reform and Its Discontents. The China Journal. 97–114 (2004).
174.
Guan, X.: China’s Social Policy: Reform and Developmentin the Context of Marketization and Globalization. Social Policy & Administration. 34, 115–130 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9515.00180.
175.
Leung, J.C.B.: Dismantling the ‘Iron Rice Bowl’: Welfare Reforms in the People’s Republic of China. Journal of Social Policy. 23, (1994). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0047279400021899.
176.
Leung, J.C.B., Wong, H.S.W.: The Emergence of a Community-based Social Assistance Programme in Urban China. Social Policy and Administration. 33, 39–54 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9515.00130.
177.
Saunders, P., Shang, X.: Social Security Reform in China’s Transition to a Market Economy. Social Policy & Administration. 35, 274–289 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9515.00233.
178.
Goodman, D.: The politics of the West: equality, nation-building and colonisation. Provincial China. 7, 127–150 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1080/1326761032000176096.
179.
Yongnian, Z., Minjia, C.: China’s Regional Disparity and its Policy Responses, http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/cpi/documents/briefings/briefing-25-china-regional-disparity.pdf, (2007).
180.
Huang, Y.: Capitalism with Chinese characteristics: entrepreneurship and the state. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
181.
Brandt, L., Rawski, T.G.: China’s great economic transformation. , Cambridge (2008).
182.
Gustafsson, B., Li, S., Sicular, T.: Inequality and public policy in China. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
183.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S.: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
184.
Brandt, L., Rawski, T.G.: China’s great economic transformation. , Cambridge (2008).
185.
Riedel, J., Jin, J., Gao, J.: How China grows: investment, finance, and reform. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (2007).
186.
Brandt, L., Rawski, T.G.: China’s great economic transformation. , Cambridge (2008).
187.
Brandt, L., Rawski, T.G.: China’s great economic transformation. , Cambridge (2008).
188.
Yang, D.L., Zhao, L.: China’s reforms at 30: challenges and prospects. World Scientific, New Jersey (2009).
189.
Wu, J.: Understanding and interpreting Chinese economic reform. Thomson South-Western, Mason, OH (2005).
190.
Yusuf, S., Nabeshima, K., Perkins, D.H.: Under new ownership: privatizing China’s state-owned enterprises. Stanford University Press, Palo Alto, CA (2006).
191.
Van Ness, P.: Revolution and Chinese foreign policy: Peking’s support for wars of national liberation. University of California Press, Berkeley (1970).
192.
Callahan, W.A.: China dreams: 20 visions of the future. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013).
193.
After Unipolarity: China’s Visions of International Order in an Era of U.S. Decline. International Security. 36, 41–72.
194.
Jintao, H.: Making an Effort to Build a Sustainable, Peaceful, and United Prosperous Harmonious World | Speech at the United Nations 60 Year Celebration, http://www.un.org/webcast/summit2005/statements15/china050915eng.pdf.
195.
Johnston, A.I.: Is China a Status Quo Power? International Security. 27, 5–56 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1162/016228803321951081.
196.
Lanteigne, M.: Chinese foreign policy: an introduction. Routledge, London (2009).
197.
Shambaugh, D.: Coping with a Conflicted China. The Washington Quarterly. 34, 7–27 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/0163660X.2011.537974.
198.
Callahan, W.A.: China: the pessoptimist nation. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010).
199.
William A. Callahan: Chinese Visions of World Order: Post-Hegemonic or a New Hegemony? International Studies Review. 10, 749–761 (2008).
200.
Avery Goldstein: The Diplomatic Face of China’s Grand Strategy: A Rising Power’s Emerging Choice. The China Quarterly. 835–864 (2001).
201.
Zhao, T.: Rethinking Empire from a Chinese Concept ‘All-under-Heaven’ (Tian-xia, ). Social Identities. 12, 29–41 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/13504630600555559.
202.
Hughes, C.R.: In Case You Missed It: China Dream. The China Beat. (5)AD.
203.
Hughes, C.: Reclassifying Chinese Nationalism: the turn. Journal of Contemporary China. 20, 601–620 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670564.2011.587161.
204.
Callahan, W.A., Barabantseva, E.: China orders the world: normative soft power and foreign policy. Woodrow Wilson Center Press, Washington, D.C. (2011).
205.
David Shambaugh: China’s Military Views the World: Ambivalent Security. International Security. 24, 52–79 (2000).
206.
Yan, X., Bell, D., Sun, Z., Ryden, E.: Ancient Chinese thought, modern Chinese power. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey (2013).
207.
Zhang, Y.: System, empire and state in Chinese international relations. Review of International Studies. 27, (2001). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210501008026.
208.
Kang, D.C.: Hierarchy in Asian International Relations: 1300-1900. Asian Security. 1, 53–79 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/14799850490928717.
209.
Bull, H., Watson, A.: The expansion of international society. Clarendon, Oxford (1984).
210.
Fairbank, J.K.: The Chinese world order: traditional China’s foreign relations. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1968).
211.
Zheng Bijian: China’s ‘Peaceful Rise’ to Great-Power Status. Foreign Affairs. 84, 18–24 (2005).
212.
William A. Callahan: How to Understand China: The Dangers and Opportunities of Being a Rising Power. Review of International Studies. 31, 701–714 (2005).
213.
Arthur Waldron: The Rise of China: Military and Political Implications. Review of International Studies. 31, 715–733 (2005).
214.
M. Taylor Fravel: Power Shifts and Escalation: Explaining China’s Use of Force in Territorial Disputes. International Security. 32, 44–83 (2008).
215.
Johnston, A.I., Ross, R.S.: New directions in the study of China’s foreign policy. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (2006).
216.
Shambaugh, D.: China Engages Asia: Reshaping the Regional Order. International Security. 29, 64–99 (2005).
217.
Getting Asia Wrong: The Need for New Analytical Frameworks. International Security. 27, 57–85 (2003).
218.
Kang, D.C.: Hierarchy in Asian International Relations: 1300-1900. Asian Security. 1, 53–79 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/14799850490928717.
219.
Suzuki, S.: Seeking `Legitimate’ Great Power Status in Post-Cold War International Society: China’s and Japan’s Participation in UNPKO. International Relations. 22, 45–63 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1177/0047117807087242.
220.
Yongjin Zhang: China’s Entry into International Society: Beyond the Standard of ‘Civilization’. Review of International Studies. 17, 3–16 (1991).
221.
Zhang, Y., ebrary, Inc: China in international society since 1949: alienation and beyond. Macmillan in association with St. Antony’s College, New York (1998).
222.
Glaser, B.S., Medeiros, E.S.: The Changing Ecology of Foreign Policy-Making in China: The Ascension and Demise of the Theory of "Peaceful Rise”. The China Quarterly. 190, (2007). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741007001208.
223.
William A. Callahan: Chinese Visions of World Order: Post-Hegemonic or a New Hegemony? International Studies Review. 10, 749–761 (2008).
224.
Richard Bernstein and Ross H. Munro: The Coming Conflict with America. Foreign Affairs. 76, 18–32 (1997).
225.
Denny Roy: Hegemon on the Horizon? China’s Threat to East Asian Security. International Security. 19, 149–168 (1994).
226.
Denny Roy: The ‘China Threat’ Issue: Major Arguments. Asian Survey. 36, 758–771 (1996).
227.
Dreyer, June Teufel: Regional security issues. Journal of International Affairs. 49,.
228.
Bernstein, R.: The coming conflict with China. Vintage Books, New York (1998).
229.
Wortzel, L.M.: China pursues traditional great-power status. Orbis. 38, 157–175 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1016/0030-4387(94)90039-6.
230.
Gerald Segal: The Coming Confrontation between China and Japan? World Policy Journal. 10, 27–32 (1993).
231.
IAN JAMES STOREY: Creeping Assertiveness: China, the Philippines and the South China Sea Dispute. Contemporary Southeast Asia. 21, 95–118 (1999).
232.
JIAN, C.: Will China’s Development Threaten Asia-Pacific Security?: A Rejoinder. Security Dialogue. 24, 193–196 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010693024002010.
233.
Odgaard, L.: Chinese Northeast Asia policies and the tragedy of Northeast Asia’s security architecture. Global Change, Peace & Security. 20, 185–199 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/14781150802079748.
234.
Robinson, T.W., Shambaugh, D.L.: Chinese foreign policy: theory and practice. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1995).
235.
Armstrong, J.D., Oxford University Press: Revolution and world order: the revolutionary state in international society. Clarendon, Oxford (1993).
236.
Van Ness, P.: Revolution and Chinese foreign policy: Peking’s support for wars of national liberation. University of California Press, Berkeley (1970).
237.
Michael Ng-Quinn: The Analytic Study of Chinese Foreign Policy. International Studies Quarterly. 27, 203–224 (1983).
238.
Thomas J. Christensen: Chinese Realpolitik. Foreign Affairs. 75, 37–52 (1996).
239.
Ross, R.S.: The Geography of the Peace: East Asia in the Twenty-first Century. International Security. 23, 81–118 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1162/isec.23.4.81.
240.
Christensen, T.J.: Posing Problems Without Catching Up: China’s Rise and Challenges for U.S. Security Policy. International Security. 25, 5–40 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1162/01622880151091880.
241.
Van Ness, P.: Hegemony, not anarchy: why China and Japan are not balancing US unipolar power. International Relations of the Asia-Pacific. 2, 131–150 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1093/irap/2.1.131.
242.
Armstrong, J.D., Oxford University Press: Revolution and world order: the revolutionary state in international society. Clarendon, Oxford (1993).
243.
Zhang, Y., ebrary, Inc: China in international society since 1949: alienation and beyond. Macmillan in association with St. Antony’s College, New York (1998).
244.
Chen, J.: China’s road to the Korean War: the making of the Sino-American confrontation. Columbia University Press, New York (1994).
245.
Snow, P.: The star raft: China’s encounter with Africa. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London (1988).
246.
Dittmer, L., Kim, S.S.: China’s quest for national identity. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. (1993).
247.
Armstrong, J.D.: Revolutionary diplomacy: Chinese foreign policy and the united front doctrine. University of California Press, Berkeley.
248.
Deng, Y.: China’s struggle for status: the realignment of international relations. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
249.
Lampton, D.M.: The three faces of Chinese power: might, money, and minds. University of California Press, Berkeley (2008).
250.
Mackinnon, A., Powell, B.: China counting: how the West was lost. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2010).
251.
Erica Strecker Downs and Phillip C. Saunders: Legitimacy and the Limits of Nationalism: China and the Diaoyu Islands. International Security. 23, 114–146 (1999).
252.
Callahan, W.A.: History, identity, and security: Producing and consuming nationalism in China. Critical Asian Studies. 38, 179–208 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/14672710600671087.
253.
Gries, P.H.: The Koguryo controversy, national identity, and Sino-Korean relations today. East Asia. 22, 3–17 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12140-005-0001-y.
254.
Callahan, W.A.: Contingent states: greater China and transnational relations. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2004).
255.
Callahan, W.A.: The Cartography of National Humiliation and the Emergence of China’s Geobody. Public Culture. 21, 141–173 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1215/08992363-2008-024.
256.
Trauma and Community: The Visual Politics of Chinese Nationalism and Sino-Japanese Relations. Theory & Event. 10, (2007).
257.
Trauma and Community: The Visual Politics of Chinese Nationalism and Sino-Japanese Relations. Theory & Event. 10, (2007).
258.
Peter Hays Gries: China’s ‘New Thinking’ on Japan. The China Quarterly. 831–850 (2005).
259.
Peter Hays Gries, Jennifer L. Prewitt-Freilino, Luz-Eugenia Cox-Fuenzalida and Qingmin Zhang: Contentious Histories and the Perception of Threat: China, the United States, and the Korean War—An Experimental Analysis. Journal of East Asian Studies. 9, 433–465 (2009).
260.
Hughes, C.R.: Japan in the politics of Chinese leadership legitimacy: recent developments in historical perspective. Japan Forum. 20, 245–266 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/09555800802047517.
261.
Parks M. Coble: China’s ‘New Remembering’ of the Anti-Japanese War of Resistance, 1937-1945. The China Quarterly. 394–410 (2007).
262.
Qingguo *, J.: Disrespect and Distrust: the external origins of contemporary Chinese nationalism. Journal of Contemporary China. 14, 11–21 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/1067056042000300754.
263.
Gerald Segal: The Coming Confrontation between China and Japan? World Policy Journal. 10, 27–32 (1993).
264.
Ian James Storey: Creeping Assertiveness: China, the Philippines and the South China Sea Dispute. Contemporary Southeast Asia. 21, 95–118 (1999).
265.
JIAN, C.: Will China’s Development Threaten Asia-Pacific Security?: A Rejoinder. Security Dialogue. 24, 193–196 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010693024002010.
266.
Odgaard, L.: Chinese Northeast Asia policies and the tragedy of Northeast Asia’s security architecture. Global Change, Peace & Security. 20, 185–199 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/14781150802079748.
267.
Ikenberry, G.J., Mastanduno, M., ebrary, Inc: International relations theory and the Asia-Pacific. Columbia University Press, New York (2003).
268.
David Shambaugh: China Engages Asia: Reshaping the Regional Order. International Security. 29, 64–99 (2005).
269.
Christensen, T.J.: Fostering Stability or Creating a Monster? The Rise of China and U.S. Policy toward East Asia. International Security. 31, 81–126 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1162/isec.2006.31.1.81.
270.
Friedberg, A.L.: Implications of the Financial Crisis for the US–China Rivalry. Survival. 52, 31–54 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/00396338.2010.506817.
271.
Foot, R.: China and the United States: Between Cold and Warm Peace. Survival. 51, 123–146 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/00396330903461708.
272.
Aaron L. Friedberg: The Future of U.S.-China Relations: Is Conflict Inevitable? International Security. 30, 7–45 (2005).
273.
Lampton, D.M.: Same bed, different dreams: managing U.S.-China relations, 1989-2000. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (2001).
274.
Lanteigne, M.: Chinese foreign policy: an introduction. Routledge, London (2009).
275.
Current history. (1941).
276.
Min, G.: Global Specialization and the China-US Economic Imbalance. The Global Studies Journal. 3, 63–76.
277.
Ping, H., Wenzhao, T., Rongjun, W., Zheng, Y., Xingshu, Z.: China-US Relations, Tending Towards Maturity. The International Spectator. 44, 9–16 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/03932720903021079.
278.
Wang Jisi: China’s Search for Stability With America. Foreign Affairs. 84, (2005).
279.
Yan, X.: The Instability of China-US Relations. The Chinese Journal of International Politics. 3, 263–292 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1093/cjip/poq009.
280.
Jian Yang,Rouben Azizian: China-US tensions: new era or old pattern? Jian Yang and Rouben Azizian predict that co-operation and friction will continue to characterise the relationship between the two great powers. New Zealand International Review. 35, (2010).
281.
Yang Zhong and Che-huan Shen: Reading China: How Do America’s China Scholars View U.S.-China Relations and China’s Future? PS: Political Science and Politics. 41, 359–365 (2008).
282.
Taylor, I.: China and Africa: engagement and compromise. Routledge, London (2006).
283.
Van Der-Putten, F.-P.: Africa and the Chinese Way. IIAS Newsletter. 60, 19–30 (2012).
284.
Mawdsley, E.: Fu Manchu versus Dr Livingstone in the Dark Continent? Representing China, Africa and the West in British broadsheet newspapers. Political Geography. 27, 509–529 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2008.03.006.
285.
Deborah, Brautigam: China’s African Aid: Transatlantic Challenges, http://trends.gmfus.org/doc/Brautigam_WEB.pdf, (2008).
286.
Trying to pull together, The Economist, http://www.economist.com/node/18586448.
287.
Moisés Naím: Rogue Aid. Foreign Policy.
288.
Jianbo, L., Xiaomin, Z.: Multilateral cooperation in Africa between China and Western countries: from differences to consensus. Review of International Studies. 37, 1793–1813 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210511000179.
289.
Taylor, I.: China’s new role in Africa. Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder, Colo (2009).
290.
Alden, C., Dawson Books: China in Africa. Zed Books, London (2007).
291.
Brautigam, D., MyiLibrary: The dragon’s gift: the real story of China in Africa. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009).
292.
OECD: How China is Influencing Africa’s Development, http://www.oecd.org/development/pgd/45068325.pdf, (2010).
293.
Chinese Trade and Investment Activities in Africa - Policy Brief - African Development Bank, http://www.afdb.org/fileadmin/uploads/afdb/Documents/Publications/Chinese%20Trade%20%20Investment%20Activities%20in%20Africa%2020Aug.pdf, (2010).
294.
Denis M. Tull: China’s Engagement in Africa: Scope, Significance and Consequences. The Journal of Modern African Studies. 44, 459–479 (2006).
295.
Guerrero, D.G.M., Manji, F.M.: China’s new role in Africa and the south: a search for a new perspective. Fahamu, Oxford (2008).
296.
Kitissou, M.: Africa in China’s global strategy. Adonis & Abbey Publishers, London (2007).
297.
Manji, F.M., Marks, S.: African perspectives on China in Africa. Fahamu, Oxford (2007).
298.
Beijing Declaration of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, http://www.china.org.cn/english/features/focac/185148.htm.
299.
Robert, S.: Imaginary Terrorism? The Global War on Terror and the Narrative of the Uyghur Terrorist Threat, http://www.ponarseurasia.org/node/6189, (2012).
300.
Bovingdon, G., Ebooks Corporation Limited: The Uyghurs: strangers in their own land. Columbia University Press, New York, NY (2010).
301.
Clarke, M.: China’s Internal Security Dilemma and the "Great Western Development”: The Dynamics of Integration, Ethnic Nationalism and Terrorism in Xinjiang. Asian Studies Review. 31, 323–342 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/10357820701621350.
302.
Bovingdon, G.: Autonomy in Xinjiang: Han Nationalist Imperatives and uyghur Discontent, http://www.eastwestcenter.org/publications/autonomy-xinjiang-han-nationalist-imperatives-and-uyghur-discontent, (2004).
303.
Dillon, M.: Xinjiang -- China’s Muslim far northwest. RoutledgeCurzon, London (2004).
304.
Callahan, W.A., Oxford University Press: China: the pessoptimist nation. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010).
305.
Millward, J.A.: Violent Separatism in Xinjiang: A Critical Assessment, http://www.eastwestcenter.org/publications/violent-separatism-xinjiang-critical-assessment, (2004).
306.
Starr, S.F.: Xinjiang: China’s Muslim borderland. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2004).
307.
Clarke, M.: The Problematic Progress of ‘Integration’ in the Chinese State’s Approach to Xinjiang, 1759 – 2005. Asian Ethnicity. 8, 261–289 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/14631360701595015.
308.
Nicolas Becquelin: Xinjiang in the Nineties. The China Journal. 65–90 (2000).
309.
Nicolas Becquelin: Staged Development in Xinjiang. The China Quarterly. 358–378 (2004).
310.
Gardner Bovingdon: The Not-So-Silent Majority: Uyghur Resistance to Han Rule in Xinjiang. Modern China. 28, 39–78 (2002).
311.
Smith, J.N.: ‘Making Culture Matter’: Symbolic, Spatial and Social Boundaries between Uyghurs and Han Chinese. Asian Ethnicity. 3, 153–174 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1080/14631360220132718.
312.
Millward, J.A.: Introduction: Does the 2009 Urumchi violence mark a turning point? Central Asian Survey. 28, 347–360 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/02634930903577128.
313.
Barabantseva, V.E.: Development as Localization: Ethnic Minorities in China’s Official Discourse on the Western Development Project. Critical Asian Studies. 41, 225–254 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/14672710902809393.
314.
Shichor, Y.: Ethno-diplomacy : the Uyghur hitch in Sino-Turkish relations. East-West Center (2009).
315.
Clarke, M.E.: Xinjiang and China’s rise in Central Asia: a history. Routledge, London (2011).
316.
Breslin, S., Dawson Books: China and the global political economy. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2007).
317.
Zhang vs. Yang on the China Model, http://cmp.hku.hk/2011/03/29/11205/.
318.
Chan, J., Ngai, P.: Suicide as Protest for the New Generation of Chinese Migrant Workers: Foxconn, Global Capital, and the State. Asia-Pacific journal: Japan focus. 8, (2010).
319.
Edward Wong: China’s President Lashes Out at Western Culture. The New York Times. 2012, (2012).
320.
Cox, R.W.: Social Forces, States and World Orders: Beyond International Relations Theory. Millennium - Journal of International Studies. 10, 126–155 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1177/03058298810100020501.
321.
Brandt, L., Rawski, T.G.: China’s great economic transformation. , Cambridge (2008).
322.
Chow, G.C., Askews & Holts Library Services: China’s economic transformation. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, Hoboken (2015).
323.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
324.
Chu, Y.: Chinese capitalisms: historical emergence and political implications. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2010).
325.
Booth, K.: Critical security studies and world politics. Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder, Colo (2005).
326.
Guthrie, D., Ebooks Corporation Limited: China and globalization: the social, economic and political transformation of Chinese society. Routledge, London (2006).
327.
Zheng, Y.: Globalization and state transformation in China. Cambridge University Press, New York (2004).
328.
Howell, J.: Governance in China. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, Md (2004).
329.
Hsu, S.P., Wu, Y., Zhao, S.: In search of China’s development model: beyond the Beijing consensus. Routledge, London (2011).
330.
Ramo, J.C.: The Beijing Consensus, http://fpc.org.uk/publications/TheBeijingConsensus, (2004).
331.
Pan, W.: The Chinese Model of Development, http://fpc.org.uk/fsblob/888.pdf.
332.
The End of the Beijing Consensus.
333.
‘Is there a China model?’ (Issue 5, Special Issue). China Elections and Governance Review.
334.
The World Bank: China 2030: Building a Modern, Harmonious and Creative High Income Society, http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/03/17494829/china-2030-building-modern-harmonious-creative-society, (2013).
335.
Callick, Rowan: The China Model. American (19328117). 1, 36–104 (1932).
336.
Zhao, S.: The China Model: can it replace the Western model of modernization? Journal of Contemporary China. 19, 419–436 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670561003666061.
337.
van der Putten, F.-P.: Africa and the Chinese Way. The Newsletter (International Institute for Asian Studies).
338.
Dittmer, L., Yu, G.T.: China, the developing world, and the new global dynamic. Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder, Colo (2010).
339.
Hutton, W.: The writing on the wall: China and the West in the 21st century. Little, Brown, London (2007).
340.
Naughton, B.: The Chinese economy: transitions and growth. MIT, Cambridge, Mass (2007).
341.
Yang, D.L., Zhao, L.: China’s reforms at 30: challenges and prospects. World Scientific, New Jersey (2009).
342.
Wei, S.-J., Wen, G., Zhou, H.: The globalization of the Chinese economy. E. Elgar, Cheltenham (2002).
343.
Pál Nyíri: The Yellow Man’s Burden: Chinese Migrants on a Civilizing Mission. The China Journal. 83–106 (2006).
344.
Mohan, Giles: Chinese Migrants in Africa as New Agents of Development? An Analytical Framework. European Journal of Development Research. 21, 588–605 (2009).
345.
Leibold, J.: Ethnic Policy in China: Is Reform Inevitable? East-West Center (2013).
346.
Stevan Harrell: Ethnicity, Local Interests, and the State: Yi Communities in Southwest China. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 32, 515–548 (1990).
347.
Schein, L.: Minority rules: the Miao and the feminine in China’s cultural politics. Duke University Press, Durham (2000).
348.
Kerr, D.: China’s many dreams: comparative perspectives on China’s search for national rejuvenation. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2015).
349.
Tobin, D.: Competing Communities: Ethnic Unity and Ethnic Boundaries on China’s North-West Frontier. Inner Asia. 13, 7–25 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1163/000000011797372922.
350.
Gladney, D.C.: Dislocating China: reflections on Muslims, minorities, and other subaltern subjects. Hurst & Company, London (2004).
351.
Leibold, J.: Reconfiguring Chinese nationalism: how the Qing frontier and its indigenes became Chinese. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2007).
352.
Leibold, J.: Toward A Second Generation of Ethnic Policies? China Brief. 12, (2012).
353.
Leibold, J.: Can China Have a Melting Pot? The Diplomat. (2012).
354.
Callahan, W.A., Oxford University Press: China: the pessoptimist nation. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010).
355.
Smith, J.N.: ‘Making Culture Matter’: Symbolic, Spatial and Social Boundaries between Uyghurs and Han Chinese. Asian Ethnicity. 3, 153–174 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1080/14631360220132718.
356.
Barabantseva, E.: Overseas Chinese, ethnic minorities, and nationalism: de-centering China. Routledge, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] (2011).
357.
Harrell, S., American Council of Learned Societies: Cultural encounters on China’s ethnic frontiers. University of Washington Press, Seattle (1995).
358.
Fei, X.: Plurality and Unity in the Configuration of the Chinese People (The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, delivered at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, November 15 and 17 1988), http://tannerlectures.utah.edu/_documents/a-to-z/f/fei90.pdf.
359.
Ma, R.: A New Perspective in Guiding Ethnic Relations in the Twenty-first Century: ‘De-politicization’ of Ethnicity in China. Asian Ethnicity. 8, 199–217 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/14631360701594950.
360.
Yoshino, K.: Consuming ethnicity and nationalism: Asian experiences. University of Hawaiʻi Press, Honolulu (1999).
361.
Mullaney, T.S.: Critical Han studies: the history, representation, and identity of China’s majority. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (2012).
362.
Mullaney, T.S.: Ethnic Classification Writ Large: The 1954 Yunnan Province Ethnic Classification Project and its Foundations in Republican-Era Taxonomic Thought. China Information. 18, 207–241 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X04044685.
363.
Mullaney, T.S.: Introduction: 55 + 1 = 1 or the Strange Calculus of Chinese Nationhood. China Information. 18, 197–205 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X04044684.
364.
Baranovitch, N.: China’s new voices: popular music, ethnicity, gender, and politics, 1978-1997. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (2003).
365.
Chow, K., Doak, K.M., Fu, P.: Constructing nationhood in modern East Asia. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Mich (2001).
366.
Bovingdon, G.: Autonomy in Xinjiang: Han Nationalist Imperatives and uyghur Discontent, http://www.eastwestcenter.org/publications/autonomy-xinjiang-han-nationalist-imperatives-and-uyghur-discontent, (2004).
367.
Roberts, S.: Imaginary Terrorism? The Global War on Terror and the Narrative of the Uyghur Terrorist Threat, http://www.ponarseurasia.org/node/6189, (2012).
368.
Starr, S.F.: Xinjiang: China’s Muslim borderland. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2004).
369.
Schlee, G.: Imagined differences: hatred and the construction of identity. Lit Verlag, Münster (2002).
370.
Kymlicka, W., He, B., Oxford University Press: Multiculturalism in Asia. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005).
371.
Xiaotong, F.: Ethnic Identification in China. Social Sciences in China. 1, 94–107 (1980).
372.
Tung, F.H., Xiaotong, F.: Toward a people’s anthropology. New World Press, Beijing (1981).
373.
Theorizing Postsocialism: Reflections on the Politics of Marginality in Contemporary China. The South Atlantic Quarterly. 101, 33–55 (2002).
374.
Shi, Z.: Autonomy, ethnicity, and poverty in Southwestern China: the state turned upside down. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2007).
375.
Gladney, D.C.: Dislocating China: reflections on Muslims, minorities, and other subaltern subjects. Hurst & Company, London (2004).
376.
Nicolas Becquelin: Xinjiang in the Nineties. The China Journal. 65–90 (2000).
377.
Eileen Rose Walsh: From Nü Guo to Nü’er Guo: Negotiating Desire in the Land of the Mosuo. Modern China. 31, 448–486 (2005).
378.
Barabantseva, E.: From the Language of Class to the Rhetoric of Development: discourses of ‘nationality’ and ‘ethnicity’ in China. Journal of Contemporary China. 17, 565–589 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560802000332.
379.
Zhu, Y., Blachford, D.: Ethnic minority issues in China’s foreign policy: perspectives and implications. The Pacific Review. 18, 243–264 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/09512740500162907.
380.
Shi, Z.: Negotiating ethnicity in China: citizenship as a response to the state. Routledge, London (2002).
381.
Keyes, C.F., Kendall, L., Hardacre, H., Joint Committee on Southeast Asia, Joint Committee on Korea, Joint Committee on Japan: Asian visions of authority: religion and the modern states of East and Southeast Asia. University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu (1994).
382.
Benson, L., Svanberg, I.: China’s last Nomads: the history and culture of China’s Kazaks. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1998).
383.
Dautcher, J.: Down a narrow road: identity and masculinity in a Uyghur community in Xinjiang China. Harvard University Asia Center, Cambridge, Mass (2009).
384.
Bellér-Hann, I.: Community matters in Xinjiang, 1880-1949: towards a historical anthropology of the Uyghur. Brill, Leiden (2008).
385.
Lai, H.H.: China’s Western Development Program: Its Rationale, Implementation, and Prospects. Modern China. 28, 432–466 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1177/009770040202800402.
386.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
387.
Callahan, W.A.: Shanghai’s alternative futures: The World Expo, citizen intellectuals, and China’s new civil society. China Information. 26, 251–273 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X12442889.
388.
Howell, J.: Governance in China. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, Md (2004).
389.
Davis, D., Wang, F., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Creating wealth and poverty in postsocialist China. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA (2009).
390.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
391.
He, B.: The democratic implications of civil society in China. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1997).
392.
O’Brien, K.J.: Rightful Resistance. World Politics. 49, 31–55 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1353/wp.1996.0022.
393.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
394.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Dawson Books: State and society in 21st century China: crisis, contention, and legitimation. RoutledgeCurzon, New York (2004).
395.
Goldman, M.: From comrade to citizen: struggle for political rights in China. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA (2005).
396.
Bell, D.: Confucian political ethics. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (2008).
397.
Shu-Yun Ma: The Chinese Discourse on Civil Society. The China Quarterly. 180–193 (1994).
398.
Hurst, W.: Understanding contentious collective action by Chinese laid-off workers: The importance of regional political economy. Studies in Comparative International Development. 39, 94–120 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02686279.
399.
Dillon, M.: Xinjiang -- China’s Muslim far northwest. RoutledgeCurzon, London (2004).
400.
Howell, J.: Governance in China. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, Md (2004).
401.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
402.
Tsai, K.S.: Capitalism without democracy: the private sector in contemporary China. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. (2007).
403.
Yang, D.L., Zhao, L.: China’s reforms at 30: challenges and prospects. World Scientific, New Jersey (2009).
404.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
405.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
406.
Anagnost, A.: From ‘Class’ to ‘Social Strata’: grasping the social totality in reform-era China. Third World Quarterly. 29, 497–519 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436590801931488.
407.
Heberer, T., Schubert, G., Dawson Books: Regime legitimacy in contemporary China: institutional change and stability. Routledge, London (2009).
408.
Perry, E.J., Selden, M., Dawson Books: Chinese society: change, conflict and resistance. Routledge, Abingdon (2010).
409.
Rural Protest. Journal of Democracy. 20, 25–28 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.0.0103.
410.
O’Brien, K.J., Li, L.: Rightful resistance in rural China. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
411.
Bernstein, T.P., Lü, X.: Taxation without representation in rural China. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2003).
412.
Benewick, R., Wingrove, P.: China in the 1990s. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1999).
413.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
414.
Review by: Kevin J. O’Brien: Review: Collective Action in the Chinese Countryside. The China Journal. 139–154 (2002).
415.
William Hurst and Kevin J. O’Brien: China’s Contentious Pensioners. The China Quarterly. 345–360 (2002).
416.
Lianjiang Li and Kevin J. O’Brien: Villagers and Popular Resistance in Contemporary China. Modern China. 22, 28–61 (1996).
417.
Bovingdon, G., Ebooks Corporation Limited: The Uyghurs: strangers in their own land. Columbia University Press, New York, NY (2010).
418.
Gardner Bovingdon: The Not-So-Silent Majority: Uyghur Resistance to Han Rule in Xinjiang. Modern China. 28, 39–78 (2002).
419.
Dillon, M.: Xinjiang -- China’s Muslim far northwest. RoutledgeCurzon, London (2004).
420.
Li, S.: The online public space and popular ethos in China. Media, Culture & Society. 32, 63–83 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1177/0163443709350098.
421.
Zhang, X., Zheng, Y.: China’s information and communications technology revolution: social changes and state responses. Routledge, London (2009).
422.
Murphy, R., Fong, V.L.: Media, identity, and struggle in twenty-first-century China. Routledge, London (2009).
423.
Heberer, T., Schubert, G., Dawson Books: Regime legitimacy in contemporary China: institutional change and stability. Routledge, London (2009).
424.
Scotton, J.F., Hachten, W.A., MyiLibrary: New media for a new China. Wiley-Blackwell, Malden, Mass (2010).
425.
Zhao, Y.: Media, market, and democracy in China: between the party line and the bottom line. University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL (1998).
426.
Polumbaum, J., Xiong, L.: China ink: the changing face of Chinese journalism. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md (2008).
427.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
428.
Liang, B., Lu, H.: Internet Development, Censorship, and Cyber Crimes in China. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice. 26, 103–120 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1177/1043986209350437.
429.
Wang, S.S., Hong, J.: Discourse behind the Forbidden Realm: Internet surveillance and its implications on China’s blogosphere. Telematics and Informatics. 27, 67–78 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tele.2009.03.004.
430.
Zhang, X., Zheng, Y.: China’s information and communications technology revolution: social changes and state responses. Routledge, London (2009).
431.
Zhang, L., Ong, A.: Privatizing China: socialism from afar. Cornell University Press, Ithaca (2008).
432.
Lieberthal, K.: China’s Governing System and it’s Impact on Environmental Policy Implementation. China Environment Series. 1, (1997).
433.
Ho, P.: Greening Without Conflict? Environmentalism, NGOs and Civil Society in China. Development and Change. 32, 893–921 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-7660.00231.
434.
Lu, Y.: Environmental civil society and governance in China. International Journal of Environmental Studies. 64, 59–69 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/00207230601157708.
435.
chinadialogue - china and the environment, https://www.chinadialogue.net/.
436.
Wilson Center | Independent Research, Open Dialogue, Actionable Ideas, https://www.wilsoncenter.org/.
437.
China Development Brief, http://chinadevelopmentbrief.cn/.
438.
Lieberthal, K.: Governing China: from revolution through reform. W. W. Norton, New York, N.Y. (2004).
439.
Economy, E., Council on Foreign Relations: The river runs black: the environmental challenge to China’s future. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. (2004).
440.
Elizabeth C. Economy: The Great Leap Backward? The Costs of China’s Environmental Crisis. Foreign Affairs. 86, 38–59 (2007).
441.
Ho, P., Edmonds, R.L.: Perspectives of Time and Change: Rethinking Embedded Environmental Activism in China. China Information. 21, 331–344 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X07079649.
442.
Jahiel, A.R.: The Organization of Environmental Protection in China. The China Quarterly. 156, (1998). https://doi.org/10.1017/S030574100005133X.
443.
Mol, A., Carter, N.: China’s environmental governance in transition. Environmental Politics. 15, 149–170 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/09644010600562765.
444.
Tony Saich: Negotiating the State: The Development of Social Organizations in China. The China Quarterly. 124–141 (2000).
445.
van Rooij, B.: Implementation of Chinese Environmental Law: Regular Enforcement and Political Campaigns. Development and Change. 37, 57–74 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0012-155X.2006.00469.x.
446.
Guobin Yang: Environmental NGOs and Institutional Dynamics in China. The China Quarterly. 46–66 (2005).
447.
Li, C., Dawson Books: China’s changing political landscape: prospects for democracy. Brookings Institution Press, Washington, D.C. (2008).
448.
Bernstein, T.: Village Democracy and Its Limits. ASIEN. 99, 29–42 (2006).
449.
Charter 08 | Human Rights in China, http://www.hrichina.org/en/content/238.
450.
Grugel, J., Bishop, M.L.: Democratization: a critical introduction. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2014).
451.
China.org.cn: White Paper on Political Democracy Published, http://www.china.org.cn/english/2005/Oct/145718.htm.
452.
Tun-Jen Cheng: Democratizing the Quasi-Leninist Regime in Taiwan. World Politics. 41, 471–499 (1989).
453.
Yongnian Zheng: Development and Democracy: Are They Compatible in China? Political Science Quarterly. 109, 235–259 (1994).
454.
Nathan, A.J., Gilley, B.: China’s new rulers: the secret files. New York Review of Books, New York, N.Y. (2003).
455.
Bruce Gilley: The ‘End of Politics’ in Beijing. The China Journal. 115–135 (2004).
456.
Shirk, S.L., Dawson Books: China: fragile superpower. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007).
457.
Pei, M.: China’s trapped transition: the limits of developmental autocracy. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2006).
458.
Nathan, A.J., Shi, T., Ho, H.V.S.: China’s transition. Columbia University Press, New York (1997).
459.
Zhao, S.: Political Liberalization without Democratization: Pan Wei’s proposal for political reform. Journal of Contemporary China. 12, 333–355 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/1067056022000054641.
460.
Lowell Dittmer: Leadership Change and Chinese Political Development. The China Quarterly. 903–925 (2003).
461.
Fewsmith, J.: The Sixteenth National Party Congress: The Succession that Didn’t Happen. The China Quarterly. 173, 1–16 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009443903000020.
462.
Finkelstein, D.M., Kivlehan, M.: China’s leadership in the 21st century: the rise of the fourth generation. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2003).
463.
Brødsgaard, K.E., Zheng, Y.: The Chinese Communist Party in reform. Routledge, London (2006).
464.
Saich, T.: Governance and politics of China. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2011).
465.
Pei, M.: Contending Perspectives of Reforming the Chinese Political System - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, http://carnegieendowment.org/2001/12/06/contending-perspectives-of-reforming-chinese-political-system/par.
466.
Unger, J., Dittmer, L.: The nature of Chinese politics: from Mao to Jiang. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (2002).
467.
Yongnian Zheng: Development and Democracy: Are They Compatible in China? Political Science Quarterly. 109, 235–259 (1994).
468.
Daniel Lynch: Taiwan’s Democratization and the Rise of Taiwanese Nationalism as Socialization to Global Culture. Pacific Affairs. 75, 557–574 (2003).
469.
Parry, G., Moran, M.: Democracy and democratization. Routledge, London (1994).
470.
Potter, D.: Democratization. Polity Press, Cambridge (1997).
471.
Vanhanen, T.: Democratization: a comparative analysis of 170 countries. Routledge, London (2003).
472.
Whitehead, L., Oxford University Press: Democratization: theory and experience. Oxford studies in democratization, (2002).
473.
Schmitter, P.C., Karl, T.L.: What Democracy Is. . . and Is Not. Journal of Democracy. 2, 75–88 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1991.0033.
474.
Gries, P.H., Rosen, S., Ebooks Corporation Limited: Chinese politics: state, society and the market. Routledge, London (2010).
475.
Shambaugh, D.L.: The modern Chinese state. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2000).
476.
Yangsun Chou and Andrew J. Nathan: Democratizing Transition in Taiwan. Asian Survey. 27, 277–299 (1987).
477.
Zhu, Y., Diamond, L.J., Sin, T.: Halting Progress in Korea and Taiwan. Journal of Democracy. 12, 122–136 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2001.0018.
478.
Ramon H. Myers: A New Chinese Civilization: The Evolution of the Republic of China on Taiwan. The China Quarterly. 1072–1090 (1996).
479.
Dickson, B.J.: Democratization in China and Taiwan: the adaptability of Leninist parties. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1997).
480.
Friedman, E.: The politics of democratization: generalizing East Asian experiences. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1994).
481.
Tsang, S.Y.-S., Tien, H., St. Antony’s College (University of Oxford): Democratization in Taiwan: implications for China. Macmillan in association with St Antony’s College, Oxford, Basingstoke (1999).
482.
Hung-mao Tien and Yun-han Chu: Building Democracy in Taiwan. The China Quarterly. 1141–1170 (1996).
483.
Hood, S.J.: The Kuomintang and the democratization of Taiwan. WestviewPress, Boulder, Colo (1997).
484.
Wu, J.J.: Taiwan’s democratization: forces behind the new momentum. Oxford University Press, Hong Kong (1995).
485.
Fravel, M.T.: Towards Civilian Supremacy: Civil-Military Relations in Taiwan’s Democratization. Armed Forces & Society. 29, 57–84 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1177/0095327X0202900104.
486.
Minxin Pei: Is China Democratizing? Foreign Affairs. 77, 68–82 (1998).
487.
An Chen: Capitalist Development, Entrepreneurial Class, and Democratization in China. Political Science Quarterly. 117, 401–422 (2002).
488.
Yongshun Cai: Managed Participation in China. Political Science Quarterly. 119, 425–451 (2004).
489.
Mark P. Petracca and Mong Xiong: The Concept of Chinese Neo-Authoritarianism: An Exploration and Democratic Critique. Asian Survey. 30, 1099–1117 (1990).
490.
D Shlapentokh,: Post-Mao China: an alternative to ‘The end of history’? Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 35, 237–268.
491.
Gilley, B.: China’s democratic future: how it will happen and where it will lead. Columbia University Press, New York (2004).
492.
Nathan, A.J.: Chinese democracy. University of California Press, Berkeley (1986).
493.
Chen, A.: Rising-Class Politics and its Impact on China’s Path to Democracy. Democratization. 10, 141–162 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/714000126.
494.
Liang, Z., Nathan, A.J., Link, E.P.: The Tiananmen papers. Little, Brown, London (2001).
495.
Benton, G., Hunter, A.: Wild lily, prairie fire: China’s road to democracy, Yan’an to Tian’anmen, 1942-89. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1995).
496.
Benton, G.: Wild lilies: poisonous weeds : dissident voices from People’s China. Pluto Press, London (1982).
497.
Barme, G., Minford, J.: Seeds of fire: Chinese voices of conscience. Bloodaxe Books, Newcastle upon Tyne (1989).
498.
Pei, M.: China’s trapped transition: the limits of developmental autocracy. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2006).
499.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
500.
Friedman, E.: China: A Threat to or Threatened by Democracy? Dissent. 56, 7–12 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1353/dss.0.0018.
501.
Liu, Y., Chen, D.: Why China Will Democratize. The Washington Quarterly. 35, 41–63 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/0163660X.2012.641918.
502.
Zhao, S.: Three Scenarios. Journal of Democracy. 9, 54–59 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1998.0020.
503.
Guthrie, D., Ebooks Corporation Limited: China and globalization: the social, economic and political transformation of Chinese society. Routledge, London (2006).
504.
Peerenboom, R.P., Oxford University Press: China modernizes: threat to the West or model for the rest? Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008).
505.
Tubilewicz, C.: Critical issues in contemporary China. Routledge, Abingdon, Oxon (2006).
506.
Brødsgaard, K.E., Zheng, Y.: The Chinese Communist Party in reform. Routledge, London (2006).
507.
Brady, A.-M.: Message from China | BBC World Service | Documentaries, http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/documentaries/2008/04/080407_message_from_china.shtml, (2008).
508.
Miles, J.: The Lost Voices of Tiananmen - Part One | BBC World Service | Documentaries, http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/documentaries/2009/05/090519_lostvoices_tiananmen_one.shtml, (2009).
509.
Miles, J.: The Lost Voices of Tiananmen - Part Two | BBC World Service | Documentaries, http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/documentaries/2009/05/090526_lostvoices_tiananmen_two.shtml, (2009).
510.
Huang, Y.: Yasheng Huang: Does democracy stifle economic growth? | TED Talk, http://www.ted.com/talks/yasheng_huang, (2011).
511.
O’Brien, K.J., Han, R.: Path to Democracy? Assessing village elections in China. Journal of Contemporary China. 18, 359–378 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560902770206.
512.
Louie, K.-S.: Village Self-Governance and Democracy in China: An Evaluation. Democratization. 8, 134–154 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1080/714000220.
513.
Jean C. Oi and Scott Rozelle: Elections and Power: The Locus of Decision-Making in Chinese Villages. The China Quarterly. 513–539 (2000).
514.
Zhong, Y., Chen, J.: To Vote or Not to Vote: An Analysis of Peasants’ Participation in Chinese Village Elections. Comparative Political Studies. 35, 686–712 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414002035006003.
515.
Björn Alpermann: The Post-Election Administration of Chinese Villages. The China Journal. 45–67 (2001).
516.
Lianjiang Li: The Empowering Effect of Village Elections in China. Asian Survey. 43, 648–662 (2003).
517.
Li, L.: Elections and Popular Resistance in Rural China (Revised Version). China Information. 16, 89–107 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X0201600104.
518.
Howell, J.: Governance in China. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, Md (2004).
519.
Kevin J. O’Brien: Villagers, Elections, and Citizenship in Contemporary China. Modern China. 27, 407–435 (2001).
520.
Kevin J. O’Brien and Lianjiang Li: Accommodating ‘Democracy’ in a One-Party State: Introducing Village Elections in China. The China Quarterly. 465–489 (2000).
521.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
522.
Bianco, L., Bell, M.: Origins of the Chinese revolution, 1915-1949. Stanford University Press, Stanford [Calif.] (1971).
523.
Dirlik, A.: The origins of Chinese communism. Oxford University Press, New York (1989).
524.
Goodman, D.S.G.: Social and political change in revolutionary China: the Taihang Base area in the War of Resistance to Japan, 1937-1945. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham (2000).
525.
Goldstein, S.M., Hartford, K.: Single sparks: China’s rural revolutions. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y (1989).
526.
Johnson, C.A.: Peasant nationalism and communist power: the emergence of revolutionary China, 1937-1945. Stanford University Press, Stanford (1962).
527.
Selden, M.: The Yenan Way in revolutionary China. Harvard U. P., Cambridge (Mass.) (1971).
528.
Unger, J.: Using the past to serve the present: historiography and politics in contemporary China. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1993).
529.
Womack, B.: Contemporary Chinese politics in historical perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1991).
530.
Wou, O.Y.K.: Mobilizing the masses: building revolution in Henan. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1994).
531.
Blecher, M.J.: China against the tides: restructuring through revolution, radicalism and reform. Continuum, London (2010).
532.
Fairbank, J.K., Goldman, M.: China: a new history. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2005).
533.
Gray, J.: Rebellions and revolutions: China from the 1800s to the 1980s. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1990).
534.
MacFarquhar, R.: The politics of China: the eras of Mao and Deng. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
535.
Meisner, M.J., Meisner, M.J.: Mao’s China and after: a history of the People’s Republic. Free Press, New York (1986).
536.
Dixon, J.E.: The Chinese welfare system, 1949-1979. Praeger, New York, N.Y. (1981).
537.
MacFarquhar, R., Fairbank, J.K. eds: The Cambridge History of China: Volume 15 Part 2: The People’s Republic. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1991).
538.
Schram, S.R.: Mao Tse-tung. Penguin Books, Harmondsworth (1966).
539.
MacFarquhar, R., Fairbank, J.K. eds: The Cambridge History of China: Volume 14 Part 1: The People’s Republic. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1987).
540.
Vogel, E.F.: Canton under communism: programs and politics in a provincial capital, 1949-1968. Harper & Row, New York (1971).
541.
Gao, M.C.F.: The battle for China’s past: Mao and the Cultural Revolution. Pluto Press, London (2008).
542.
An, P.: Chinese politics and the Cultural Revolution: dynamics of policy processes. University of Washington Press, Seattle (1976).
543.
Barnouin, B., Yu, C.: Chinese foreign policy during the Cultural Revolution. Kegan Paul International, London (1998).
544.
Dittmer, L.: Liu Shaoqi and the Chinese cultural revolution. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1998).
545.
Huang, S.: To rebel is justified: a rhetorical study of China’s Cultural Revolution Movement, 1966-1969. University Press of America, Lanham, Md (1996).
546.
Qiu, J.: The culture of power: the Lin Biao incident in the Cultural Revolution. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1999).
547.
Perry, E.J., Li, X.: Proletarian power: Shanghai in the Cultural Revolution. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1997).
548.
Robinson, T.W., Baum, R.: The cultural revolution in China. University of California Press, Berkeley (1971).
549.
Schoenhals, M.: China’s cultural revolution, 1966-1969: not a dinner party. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1996).
550.
Teiwes, F.C., Sun, W.: The tragedy of Lin Biao: riding the Tiger during the Cultural Revolution 1966-1971. Hurst & Co, London (1996).
551.
Andrew G. Walder and Yang Su: The Cultural Revolution in the Countryside: Scope, Timing and Human Impact. The China Quarterly. 74–99 (2003).
552.
Yan, J., Kao, K., Kwok, D.W.Y.: Turbulent decade: a history of the cultural revolution. University of Hawai’i Press, Honolulu (1996).
553.
Zang, X.: Children of the cultural revolution: family life and political behavior in Mao’s China. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (2000).
554.
Bennett, G.A., Montaperto, R.N.: Red Guard: the political biography of Dai Hsiao-ai. Allen and Unwin, London (1971).
555.
Evans, H., Donald, S.: Picturing power in the People’s Republic of China: posters of the Cultural Revolution. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md (1999).
556.
Gao, Y.: Born red: a chronicle of the Cultural Revolution. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1987).
557.
Thurston, A.F.: Enemies of the people: the ordeal of the intellectuals in China’s great Cultural Revolution. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1988).
558.
Baum, R.: Burying Mao: Chinese politics in the age of Deng Xiaoping. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1996).
559.
Fairbank, J.K., Goldman, M.: China: a new history. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2005).
560.
Fewsmith, J.: Dilemmas of reform in China: political conflict and economic debate. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1994).
561.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
562.
MacFarquhar, R.: The politics of China: the eras of Mao and Deng. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
563.
Goodman, D.S.G., Segal, G.: China in the nineties: crisis management and beyond. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1991).
564.
Goodman, D.S.G., Hooper, B.: China’s quiet revolution: new interactions between state and society. Longman Cheshire, Melbourne (1994).
565.
Leung, J.C.B.: Dismantling the ‘Iron Rice Bowl’: Welfare Reforms in the People’s Republic of China. Journal of Social Policy. 23, (1994). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0047279400021899.
566.
Naughton, B.: Growing out of the plan: Chinese economic reform, 1978-1993. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
567.
Shirk, S.L.: The political logic of economic reform in China. University of California Press, Berkeley (1993).
568.
Cheek, T.: Living with reform: China since 1989. Fernwood Publishing, Nova Scotia, N.S. (2006).
569.
Fewsmith, J.: Dilemmas of reform in China: political conflict and economic debate. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1994).
570.
Guillermaz, J., Destenay, A.: The Chinese Communist Party in power, 1949-1976. Dawson, Folkestone (1976).
571.
MacFarquhar, R., Fairbank, J.K. eds: The Cambridge History of China: Volume 15 Part 2: The People’s Republic. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1991).
572.
Teiwes, F.C.: Politics and purges in China: rectification and the decline of party norms, 1950-1965. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1993).
573.
Tsou, T.: The Cultural Revolution and post-Mao reforms: a historical perspective. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1986).
574.
Zheng, S.: Party vs. state in post-1949 China: the institutional dilemma. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
575.
Bickford, T.J.: The Chinese Military and Its Business Operations: The PLA as Entrepreneur. Asian Survey. 34, 460–474 (1994).
576.
Burns, J.P.: China’s administrative reforms for a market economy. Public Administration and Development. 13, 345–360 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1002/pad.4230130404.
577.
Burns, J.P.: Chinese Civil Service Reform: The 13th Party Congress Proposals. The China Quarterly. 120, (1989). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741000018440.
578.
Burns, J.P.: The Chinese Communist Party’s Nomenklatura system: a documentary study of party control of leadership selection, 1979-1984. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1989).
579.
Howell, J.: Governance in China. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, Md (2004).
580.
Burns, J.P.: ‘Downsizing’ the Chinese State: Government Retrenchment in the 1990s. The China Quarterly. 775–802 (2003).
581.
Chan, A.: From Propaganda to Hegemony: Jiaodian Fangtan and China’s Media Policy. Journal of Contemporary China. 11, 35–51 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560120091138.
582.
Duckett, J.: The entrepreneurial state in China: real estate and commerce departments in reform era Tianjin. Routledge, London (1998).
583.
Kwong, J.: The political economy of corruption in China. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1997).
584.
Landell-Mills, P.: Coming to Grips with Governance: The lessons of experience. Journal of Contemporary China. 12, 357–371 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/1067056022000054650.
585.
Li, L.: The Politics of Introducing Direct Township Elections in China. The China Quarterly. 704–723 (2002).
586.
O’Brien, K.J., Li, L.: Accommodating ‘Democracy’ in a One-Party State: Introducing Village Elections in China. The China Quarterly. 465–489 (2000).
587.
O’Brien, K.J.: Reform without liberalization: China’s National People’s Congress and the politics of institutional change. Cambridge University Press, New York, N.Y. (1990).
588.
White, G.: The Chinese state in the era of economic reform: the road to crisis. Macmillan, London (1991).
589.
Zhao, J., Dickson, B.J.: Remaking the Chinese state: strategies, society, and security. Routledge, London (2001).
590.
Yang, D.L.: Remaking the Chinese leviathan: market transition and the politics of governance in China. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (2004).
591.
Zheng, S.: Party vs. state in post-1949 China: the institutional dilemma. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
592.
ZHOU, X.: Partial Reform and the Chinese Bureaucracy in the Post-Mao Era. Comparative Political Studies. 28, 440–468 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414095028003005.
593.
Diamant, N.J., Lubman, S.B., O’Brien, K.J.: Engaging the law in China: state, society, and possibilities for justice. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA (2005).
594.
Lubman, S.B.: Bird in a cage: legal reform in China after Mao. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1999).
595.
Goodman, D.S.G., Segal, G.: China deconstructs: politics, trade and regionalism. Routledge, London (1994).
596.
Edin, M.: State Capacity and Local Agent Control in China: CCP Cadre Management from a Township Perspective. The China Quarterly. 35–52 (2003).
597.
Breslin, S.: China in the 1980s: centre-province relations in a reforming socialist state. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1996).
598.
Li, L.C.: Centre and provinces: China 1978-1993 : power as non-zero-sum. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1998).
599.
Davis, M.C.: The Case for Chinese Federalism. Journal of Democracy. 10, 124–137 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1999.0027.
600.
Peerenboom, R.: A Government of Laws: Democracy, rule of law and administrative law reform in the PRC. Journal of Contemporary China. 12, 45–67 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560305468.
601.
Yang, D.L.: Beyond Beijing: liberalization and the regions in China. Routledge, London (1997).
602.
Xia, M.: Political Contestation and the Emergence of the Provincial People’s Congresses as Power Players in Chinese Politics: A network explanation. Journal of Contemporary China. 9, 185–214 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1080/713675941.
603.
Bernstein, T.P., Lü, X.: Taxation without representation in rural China. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2003).
604.
Blecher, M.J., Shue, V.: Tethered deer: government and economy in a Chinese county. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1996).
605.
Burns, J.P.: Political participation in rural China. University of California Press, Berkeley (1988).
606.
Chan, A., Madsen, R., Unger, J., Chan, A.: Chen Village under Mao and Deng. University of California Press, Berkeley (1992).
607.
Cheng, J.Y.S.: Direct Elections of Town and Township Heads in China: The Dapeng and Buyun Experiments. China Information. 15, 104–137 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X0101500103.
608.
Christiansen, F., Zhang, J.: Village Inc: Chinese rural society in the 1990s. Curzon, Richmond, Surrey (1998).
609.
Croll, E.: From heaven to earth: images and experiences of development in China. New York, London (1994).
610.
Feuchtwang, S., Hussain, A., Pairault, T.: Transforming China’s economy in the eighties. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1988).
611.
Findlay, C.C., Watson, A., Wu, H.X.: Rural enterprises in China. MacmillanNew York, N.Y., Basingstoke (1994).
612.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
613.
Goldstein, S.M., Hartford, K.: Single sparks: China’s rural revolutions. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y (1989).
614.
Levy, R.: The Village Self-Government Movement: Elections, Democracy, the Party, and Anticorruption--Developments in Guangdong. China Information. 17, 28–65 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X0301700102.
615.
Li, L., O’Brien, K.J.: Villagers and Popular Resistance in Contemporary China. Modern China. 22, 28–61 (1996).
616.
Little, D.: Understanding peasant China: case studies in the philosophy of social science. Yale University Press, New Haven (1989).
617.
Murphy, R.: How migrant labor is changing rural China. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2002).
618.
O’Brien, K.J., Li, L.: The Politics of Lodging Complaints in Rural China. The China Quarterly. 143, (1995). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741000015034.
619.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
620.
Oi, J.C.: Rural China takes off: institutional foundations of economic reform. University of California Press, Berkeley (1999).
621.
Oi, J.C.: State and peasant in contemporary China: the political economy of village government. University of California Press, Berkeley (1991).
622.
Shue, V.: Peasant China in transition: the dynamics of development towards socialism, 1949-1956. University of California Press, Berkeley (1980).
623.
Davis, D., Vogel, E.F.: Chinese society on the eve of Tiananmen: the impact of reform. Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass (1990).
624.
Wedeman, A.: Stealing from the Farmers: Institutional Corruption and the 1992 IOU Crisis. The China Quarterly. 805–831 (1997).
625.
Zweig, D.: Freeing China’s farmers: rural restructuring in the reform era. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, NY (1997).
626.
The Re-Employment Project in Shanghai: Institutional Workings and Consequences for Workers. China Information. 14, 169–193 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X0001400205.
627.
Lu, X., Perry, E.J.: Danwei: the changing Chinese workplace in historical and comparative perspective. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, N.Y. (1997).
628.
Rosenbaum, A.L.: State and society in China: the consequences of reform. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1992).
629.
Wasserstrom, J.N., Perry, E.J.: Popular protest and political culture in modern China. Westview Press, Boulder (1994).
630.
Shaw, V.N.: Social control in China: a study of Chinese work units. Praeger, Westport, Conn (1996).
631.
Shi, T.: Political participation in Beijing. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1997).
632.
Solinger, D.J.: Contesting citizenship in urban China: peasant migrants, the state, and the logic of the market. University of California Press, Berkeley (1999).
633.
Jonathan Unger: ‘Bridges’: Private Business, the Chinese Government and the Rise of New Associations. The China Quarterly. 795–819 (1996).
634.
Wank, D.L.: Private Business, Bureaucracy, and Political Alliance in a Chinese City. The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs. 55–71 (1995).
635.
Calhoun, C.J.: Neither gods nor emperors: students and the struggle for democracy in China. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (1994).
636.
Fathers, M., Higgins, A., Cottrell, R.: Tiananmen: the rape of Peking. Independent in association with Doubleday, London (1989).
637.
Walder, A.G., Xiaoxia, G.: Workers in the Tiananmen Protests: The Politics of the Beijing Workers’ Autonomous Federation. The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs. 1–29 (1993).
638.
Benewick, R., Wingrove, P.: China in the 1990s. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1999).
639.
White, G., Howell, J., Shang, X., Oxford University Press, University of Sussex. Institute of Development Studies: In search of civil society: market reform and social change in contemporary China. Clarendon, Oxford (1996).
640.
He, B.: The democratic implications of civil society in China. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1997).
641.
Howell, J.: An Unholy Trinity? Civil Society, Economic Liberalization and Democratization in post-Mao China. Government and Opposition. 33, 56–80 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1477-7053.1998.tb00783.x.
642.
Yang, G.: The Internet and Civil Society in China: A preliminary assessment. Journal of Contemporary China. 12, 453–475 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560305471.
643.
Hasmath, R., Hsu, J.: China in an era of transition: understanding contemporary state and society actors. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2009).
644.
Benewick, R., Wingrove, P.: China in the 1990s. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1999).
645.
Goldman, M., MacFarquhar, R.: The paradox of China’s post-Mao reforms. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1999).
646.
Ikels, C.: The return of the god of wealth: the transition to a market economy in urban China. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1996).
647.
Young, S.: Wealth but not Security: Attitudes Towards Private Business in China in the 1980s. The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs. 115–137 (1991).
648.
Benton, G.: Wild lilies: poisonous weeds : dissident voices from People’s China. Pluto Press, London (1982).
649.
Fang, L.Z., Williams, J.H.: Bringing down the Great Wall: writings on science, culture, and democracy in China. Norton, New York (1992).
650.
Grieder, J.B.: Intellectuals and the state in modern China: a narrative history. Free Press, New York (1983).
651.
Link, E.P.: Evening chats in Beijing: probing China’s predicament. Norton, New York (1992).
652.
Wasserstrom, J.N., Perry, E.J.: Popular protest and political culture in modern China. Westview Press, Boulder (1994).
653.
Dixon, J.E.: The Chinese welfare system, 1949-1979. Praeger, New York, N.Y. (1981).
654.
Leung, J.C.B., Wong, H.S.W.: The Emergence of a Community-based Social Assistance Programme in Urban China. Social Policy and Administration. 33, 39–54 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9515.00130.
655.
Selden, M., You, L.: The reform of social welfare in China. World Development. 25, 1657–1668 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0305-750X(97)00055-7.
656.
Cook, S., Maurer-Fazio, M.: The workers’ state meets the market: labour in China’s transition. F. Cass, London (1999).
657.
Goodman, R., White, G., Kwon, H.: The East Asian welfare model: welfare Orientalism and the state. Routledge, London (1998).
658.
Cai, Y.: State and laid-off workers in reform China: the silence and collective action of the retrenched. Routledge, London (2006).
659.
Chan, C.K., Ngok, K.L., Phillips, D.: Social policy in China: development and well-being. Policy Press, Bristol, U.K. (2008).
660.
Youwei, C.: China’s foreign policy making as seen through Tiananmen. Journal of Contemporary China. 12, 715–738 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/1067056032000117722.
661.
Garver, J.W.: Foreign relations of the People’s Republic of China. Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. (1993).
662.
Harris, S., Klintworth, G.: China as a great power: myths, realities and challenges in the Asia-Pacific region. Longman, Melbourne (1995).
663.
Howell, J.: China opens its doors: the politics of economic transition. Harvester Wheatsheaf, Hemel Hempstead (1993).
664.
Kim, S.S.: China and the world: Chinese foreign policy faces the new millennium. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1998).
665.
Lampton, D.M.: The making of Chinese foreign and security policy in the era of reform, 1978-2000. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (2001).
666.
Lampton, D.M.: Same bed, different dreams: managing U.S.-China relations, 1989-2000. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (2001).
667.
Kim, S.S.: China and the world: Chinese foreign policy faces the new millennium. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1998).
668.
Lu, N.: The dynamics of foreign-policy decisionmaking in China. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (2000).
669.
Robinson, T.W., Shambaugh, D.L.: Chinese foreign policy: theory and practice. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1995).
670.
Shambaugh, D.L.: Power shift: China and Asia’s new dynamics. University of California Press, Berkeley (2005).
671.
Shih, C.: The Spirit of Chinese Foreign Policy: A Psychocultural View. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (1990).
672.
Whiting, A.S.: China’s foreign relations. Sage, Newbury Park (1991).
673.
Hudson, C.: The China handbook. Fitzroy Dearborn, Chicago (1997).
674.
Zweig, D.: Internationalizing China: domestic interests and global linkages. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY (2002).
675.
Amnesty International: China: violations of human rights : prisoners of conscience and the death penalty in the People’s Republic of China. Amnesty International, London (1984).
676.
China | Amnesty International, https://www.amnesty.org/en/countries/asia-and-the-pacific/china/.
677.
Kent, A.E., Australia. Dept. of the Parliamentary Library. Legislative Research Service: Human rights in the People’s Republic of China. Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia, [Canberra] (1989).
678.
Dickson, B.J.: Democratization in China and Taiwan: the adaptability of Leninist parties. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1997).
679.
Goldman, M.: Sowing the seeds of democracy in China: political reform in the Deng Xiaoping era. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1994).
680.
Lei, G.: Elusive Democracy: Conceptual Change and the Chinese Democracy Movement, 1978-79 to 1989. Modern China. 22, 417–447 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1177/009770049602200403.
681.
Nathan, A.J.: Chinese democracy. University of California Press, Berkeley (1986).
682.
Womack, B.: Contemporary Chinese politics in historical perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1991).
683.
Zhao, D.: China’s Prolonged Stability and Political Future: Same political system, different policies and methods. Journal of Contemporary China. 10, 427–444 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1080/10670560120067126.
684.
Dittmer, L.: The Changing Shape of Elite Power Politics. The China Journal. 53–67 (2001).
685.
Wang, S.: The Problem of State Weakness. Journal of Democracy. 14, 36–42 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2003.0022.
686.
Xiao, G.: The Rise of the Technocrats. Journal of Democracy. 14, 60–65 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2003.0023.