Teresa Wright is Professor of Political Science at California State University, Long Beach. She is also the author of The Perils of Protest: State Repression and Student Activism in China.
Why hasn't the emergence of capitalism led China's citizenry to press for liberal democratic change? This book argues that China's combination of state-led development, late industrialization, and socialist legacies have affected popular perceptions of socioeconomic mobility, economic dependence on the state, and political options, giving citizens incentives to perpetuate the political status quo and disincentives to embrace liberal democratic change.
Wright addresses the ways in which China's political and economic development shares broader features of state-led late industrialization and post-socialist transformation with countries as diverse as Mexico, India, Tunisia, Indonesia, South Korea, Brazil, Russia, and Vietnam.
With its detailed analysis of China's major socioeconomic groups (private entrepreneurs, state sector workers, private sector workers, professionals and students, and farmers), Accepting Authoritarianism is an up-to-date, comprehensive, and coherent text on the evolution of state-society relations in reform-era China.
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There should be a bottom line for "American oriented China study" to simplify stories in China. To me this book lacks of it.
评分簡單易懂的書,少偏激
评分狗屁
评分寫的太好瞭,用階層分析的方法把中國國傢和社會關係的現狀分析瞭個透,雖然有些數據稍顯過時,但是總體的分析思路和框架式值得學習的。
评分寫的太好瞭,用階層分析的方法把中國國傢和社會關係的現狀分析瞭個透,雖然有些數據稍顯過時,但是總體的分析思路和框架式值得學習的。
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