The study of contemporary China constitutes a fascinating yet challenging area of scholarly inquiry. Recent decades have brought dramatic changes to China′s economy, society and governance. Analyzing such changes in the context of multiple disciplinary perspectives offers opportunites as well as challenges for scholars in the field known as contemporary China Studies. The SAGE Handbook of Contemporary China is a two-volume exploration of the transformations of contemporary China, firmly grounded in the both disciplinary and China-specific contexts. Drawing on a range of scholarly approaches found in the social sciences and history, an international team of contributors engage with the question of what a rapidly changing China means for the broader field of contemporary China studies, and identify areas of promising future research. Part 1: Context: History, Economy, and the Environment Part 2: Economic Transformations Part 3: Politics and Government Part 4: China on the Global Stage Part 5: China′s Foreign Policy Part 6: National and Nested Identities Part 7: Urbanization and Spatial Development Part 8: Poverty and Inequality Part 9: Social Change Part 10: Future Directions for Contemporary China Studies
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VOLUME 01
PART 01: Context: History, Economy, and the Environment
Chapter 1: The Making of the Modern State and Quest for Modernity – Dali Yang
Chapter 2: Nationalism and the Nation-State – Prasenjit Duara
Chapter 3: Continuity and Change: The Economy in the Twentieth Century – Chris Bramall
Chapter 4: Geographic and Environmental Setting – David Pietz
PART 02: Economic Transformations
Introduction – Weiping Wu
Chapter 5: Evolution of Market Reforms – Linda Yueh
Chapter 6: State-Owned Enterprise: Reform, Performance, and Prospects – Gary Jefferson
Chapter 7: The Rural Economy – Susan Whiting and Dan Wang
Chapter 8: Economic Growth and Labor Security – Jenny Chan
Chapter 9: Inbound Foreign Direct Investment – Yasheng Huang
Chapter 10: Financial System – Ming He, Yang Chen and Ronald Schramm
Chapter 11: Technology, Innovation and Knowledge-Based Economy – Albert Hu
Chapter 12: Sustaining Growth: Energy and Natural Resources – Jo Inge Bekkevold and Oystein Tunsjo
PART 03: Politics and Government
Introduction – Mark W. Frazier
Chapter 13: The Communist Party and Ideology – Kerry Brown
Chapter 14: Corruption in Reform Era: A Multidisciplinary Review – Jiangnan Zhu
Chapter 15: Campaigns in Politics: From Revolution to Problem Solving – Zhengxu Wang
Chapter 16: Popular Protest – Zhang Wu
Chapter 17: Bureaucracy and Policy Making – Andrew Mertha
Chapter 18: Local and Grassroots Governance – John Kennedy and Dan Chen
Chapter 19: Labor Politics – William Hurst
Chapter 20: Legal and Judicial System – Vivienne Bath
PART 04: China on the Global Stage
Introduction – Mark W. Frazier
Chapter 21: China as a Global Financial Power – Arthur Kroeber
Chapter 22: China and Global Energy Governance – Gaye Christoffersen
Chapter 23: China and Global Regimes – Andrew Nathan
Chapter 24: Engagement in Global Health Governance Regimes – Yanzhong Huang and Bei Tang
PART 05: China′s Foreign Policy
Introduction – Mark W. Frazier
Chapter 25: China-US Relations in a Changing Global Order – Rosemary Foot
Chapter 26: China-Japan Relations – Edward Griffith and Caroline Rose
Chapter 27: Chinese-Russian Relations – Alexander Lukin
Chapter 28: China’s Relations with the Korean Peninsula – Carla Freeman
Chapter 29: Chinese Foreign Policy: Southeast Asia – Taomou Zhou and Liu Hong
VOLUME 02
PART 06: National and Nested Identities
Introduction – Mark W. Frazier
Chapter 30: Popular Nationalism – Benjamin Darr
Chapter 31: Taiwanese Identity – Lowell Dittmer
Chapter 32: Hong Kong Identity – Ho-Fung Hung
Chapter 33: Chinese Outside China – Nyíri Pál
Chapter 34: Studying Tibetan Identity – Ben Hillman
Chapter 35: Uyghur Identities – Joanne Smith Finley
Chapter 36: Ethnic Studies Beyond Tibet and Xinjiang – Katherine Palmer Kaup
Chapter 37: Religion – André Laliberté
Chapter 38: Sexual Minorities – William F. Schroeder
PART 07: Urbanization and Spatial Development
Introduction – Weiping Wu
Chapter 39: Urbanization and Urban System – Chaolin Gu and Ian Gillespie Cook
Chapter 40: Population Mobility and Migration – Cindy Fan
Chapter 41: Financing Urbanization and Infrastructure – Weiping Wu
Chapter 42: Land and Housing Markets – Jiang Xu
Chapter 43: Socio-Spatial Transformation of Cities – Jia Feng and Guo Chen
PART 08: Poverty and Inequality
Introduction – Weiping Wu
Chapter 44: Poverty and Its Alleviation – Björn Gustafsson
Chapter 45: Regional Inequality: Scales, Mechanisms, and Beyond – Felix Haifeng Liao and Yehua Dennis Wei
Chapter 46: The Making of the ‘Migrant Class’ – Huimin Du and Wenfei Winnie Wang
Chapter 47: Gender, Migration, and HIV/STI Risks and Risk Behavior – Xiushi Yang, Hongyun Fu and Meizhen Liao
Chapter 48: Income Inequality and Class Stratification – Yanjie Bian, Lei Zhang, Yinghui Li, Yipeng Hu and Na Li
PART 09: Social Change
Introduction – Weiping Wu
Chapter 49: Demographics and Aging – David R. Phillips and Zhixin Feng
Chapter 50: Social Welfare – Daniel Hammond
Chapter 51: China′s Education System: Loved and Hated – Mette Halskov Hansen
Chapter 52: Nightlife and Night-Time Economy in Urban China – James Farrer
Chapter 53: Family Life – Jieyu Liu, Eona Bell and Jiayu Zhang
Chapter 54: Health, Diseases, and Medical Care – Lawton R. Burns and Gordon G. Liu
Chapter 55: Media since 1949: Changes and Continuities – Jian Xu and Wanning Sun
PART 10: Future Directions for Contemporary China Studies
Chapter 56: The Future(s) of China Studies – Sarah Mellors and Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Chapter 57: The Future of China′s Past – Kristin Stapleton
Chapter 58: China and the Challenges of Comparison – Mark W. Frazier