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008 021231s xx 000 0 eng
022 _a1522-3221;
050 0 _aAC1.S5
082 0 _a050
100 1 _aPei, Minxin.
245 1 0 _aChina's Governance Crisis. /
_cMinxin Pei.
260 _bForeign Affairs,
_c2002.
440 0 _aSIRS Enduring Issues 2003.
_nArticle 36.
_pGlobal Issues,
_x1522-3221;
500 _aArticles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2003.
500 _aOriginally Published: China's Governance Crisis, Sept./Oct. 2002; pp. 96-109.
520 _a"The idea of an impending governance crisis in Beijing may sound unduly alarmist. To the outside world, China is a picture of dynamism and promise. Its potential market size, consistently high growth rates, and recent accession to the World Trade Organization have made the Middle Kingdom a top destination of foreign direct investment ($46 billion in 2001), and multinational corporations salivate at the thought of its future growth. But beneath this giddy image of progress and prosperity lies a different reality--one that is concealed by the glitzy skylines of Shanghai, Beijing, and other coastal cities. The future of China, and the West's interests there, depends critically on how Beijing's new leaders deal with this somber reality." (FOREIGN AFFAIRS) This article examines problems China's political system is confronted with in the face of the "amazing transformation of the communist regime from one that was infatuated with class struggle to one obsessed by growth rates.".
599 _aRecords created from non-MARC resource.
650 0 _aCommunist Party
_zChina.
650 0 _aCrisis management in government
_zChina.
650 0 _aSocial classes
_zChina.
650 0 _aSocial policy.
651 0 _aChina
_xEconomic conditions.
651 0 _aChina
_xPolitics and government.
651 0 _aChina
_xSocial conditions.
710 2 _aSIRS Publishing, Inc.
_tSIRS Enduring Issues 2003.
_pGlobal Issues.,
_x1522-3221.
942 _c UKN
999 _c34245
_d34245