TY - BOOK AU - Lieberthal,Kenneth TI - Governing China : from revolution through reform SN - 0393924920 (pbk.) U1 - 951.05 PY - 2004/// CY - New York PB - W. W. Norton KW - China KW - Politics and government KW - History N1 - CHAPTER 1: The Legacies of Imperial China 3 The Imperial Chinese System 3 CONFUCIANISM AS IDEOI.OCY 7 THE EMPEROR 10 THE BUREAUCRACY 12 CHINESE SOCIETY 14 THE ECONOMY 17 LIMITS OF THE IMPERIAL STATE 19 Imperial Collapse 19 DECLINE OF THE QING 20 THE WESTERN CHALLENGE 22 THE QING RESPONSE AND C:OLLAPSE 24 CHAPTER 2: The Republican Era 27 The Early Republican Era 28 THE MAY FOURTH MOVEMENT 29 THE GUOMINDANG 31 The Communist Rise to Power 39 THE PATHS TO POWER 40 Labor Mobilization (1921-23) 40 United Front with the GMD (1924-27) 41 Adapting to the Countryside (1929-34) 43 Strategic Retreat: The Long March (1934-35) 47 The Yan'an Era (1935-47) 48 Fighting a Civil War (1947—49) 52 LEGACIES OF THE CXT'S PATH TO POWER 53 Part Two: POLITICS AND POLICIES SINCE 1949 57 f HAPTFR THE MAOIST SYSTEM: IDEAS /VND GOVERNANCE. 59 The Features of Mao Zedong Thought 60 PROMINENCE OF IDEOLCJCiV 62 VOLUNTARISM 63 Mass Line 64 Champaigns 65 Struggle 68 Egalitarianism 70 ANTI-INTELLECEUALISM 70 ChONTRADICTIONS AND THE UNITED FRONT 72 ChLASSES AND CLASS STRUCCILE 73 SELF-RELIANCE 76 The Governing System 77 CHAPTER 4: THE MAOIST ERA 84 Wielding Power, 1949—76 86 FROM VICTORY, THROUGH RECOVERY, TO SOCIALIST TRANSFORMATION; 1949-56 87 The Setting 87 Gaining Momentum 88 Takeover Politics 97 FROM SUCCESS TO CRISIS: 1956-57 99 LEAPS FORWARD AND BAChKWARD: 1958-61 103 INCREASING TENSION AMID RECOVERY: 1962-65 109 THE GREAT PROLETARIAN CULTURAL REVOLUTION—THE RED GUARD PHASE: 1966-69 112 SETTLING THE SUCCESSION: 1969-76 116 SUMMARY: THE MAOIST SYSTEM 119 CHAPTER 5: THE REFORM ERA 123 Setting the Stage 125 Deng Xiaoping's Reform Impulse 127 Managing the Politics of Reform 131 The Succession Issue 148 SUCCESSION AT THE TOP 148 SUCCESSION STRATEGY 149 THE COLLAPSE OF DENGS SUCCESSION STRATEGY AND JIANGS RISE 152 THE PROSPECTS FOR ELITE SUCCESSION 157 Systemic Succession 158 CHANGES TO DATE 159 THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS 166 Part Three: THE POLITICAL SYSTEM i69 CHAPTER 6: THE ORGANIZATION OF POLITICAL POWER AND ITS CONSEQUENCES: THE VIEW FROM THE OUTSIDE 171 Formal Organizational Structure 173 THE ORGANIZATIONAL CHART AT THE CENTER 173 PROVINCES 179 CITIES 182 COUNTIES 183 TOWNSHIPS 183 UNITS 184 The Matrix Muddle: Tiao/Kuai Giianxi 186 Techniques for Making the System Work 188 IDEOLOGY, DECENTRALIZATION, AND NEGOTIATIONS 189 IMPROVING AND CHANNELING INFORMATION 192 CHAPTER 7: THE ORGANIZATION OF POLITK AL POWER AND ITS CONSEQUENCES: THE VIEW FROM THE INSIDE 206 The Top Twenty-five to Thirty-five 207 Configurations of Political Power 21') THE LEADERSHIP SMALL GROUP 215 THE XirONG 218 Party Affairs Xilong 219 Organization Affairs Xilong 220 Propaganda and Education Xilong 222 Political and Legal Affairs Xilong 224 Finance and Economics Xilong 227 Military Xilong 229 Summing Up 232 Party Control of the Government 233 NOMENKLATURA APPOINTMENTS AND INTERI.OGKING DIRECTORATES 234 PARTY CORE GROUPS AND PARTY LIFE 239 The Party's Roles and Challenges 240 Part Four: THE CHALLENGES AHEAD 243 CHAPTER 8: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT 245 Incentives for High Growth 246 Reform Trends 248 Reform Policy Sequences 249 AGRICULTURE 249 THE FISCAL SYSTEM 251 FOREIGN TRADE AND INVESTMENT 254 PLANNING 259 PRICES 261 BANKING 262 CHAPTER 9: THE ENVIRONMENT 273 Environmental Problems Originating before 1978 275 NATURAL RESOURCE ENDOWMENTS 275 MAOISM AND THE ENVIRONMENT 277 Post-1978 Reforms and the Environment 279 The Political Economy of Environmental Management 281 Prognoses 286 CHAPTER 10; THE STATE AND SOCIETY 289 The Maoist State and Chinese Society 290 State-Society Relations under the Reforms 295 LOCAL CADRES IN BETWEEN 297 THE STATE AND SOCIETY 299 HUMAN RIGHTS 301 POLITICAL EQUALITY 304 CHANGES IN SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND CLEAVAGES 305 Urban-Rural Incomes 305 Gender 308 Generations 310 Conclusion 311 CHAPTER 11: CHINA FACES THE FUTURE 315 Understanc^g Domestic Developments 316 DECENTRALIZATION AND STABILITY 316 THE CENTER 318 BELOW THE CENTER 321 The Future 321 THE MAJOR DOMESTIC CHALLENGES 322 THE MAJOR TRANSNATIONAL CHALLENGES 326 GLOSSARY OF SELEC.TF.D INDIYlDUAIii CITED IN THE TEXT 337 appendk:es 349 1. Full Text of Jiang Zemins Report at the Sixteenth Party Congress 351 2. Constitution of the Communist Party of China (Amended and adopted at the Sixteenth National Otngress of the C:ommunist Party of China on 14 November 2002) 385 3. China's State Constitution (Adopted in 1982, with amendments in 1988 1993 and 1999) 407 ER -