Min YeDiasporas and Foreign Direct Investment in China and India
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Min Ye is an Assistant Professor of International Relations and the director of the East Asian Studies Program at Boston University. She has served as a visiting scholar and professor in China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and India and has taught summer courses at Fudan University, Zhejiang University, and the Chinese University of Broadcasting and Mass Media. Her publications include The Making of Northeast Asia (with Kent Calder, 2010) and various articles published in such journals as the Journal of East Asian Studies, Modern China Studies, and China Public Affairs Quarterly. In China, Ye also serves as a consultant on globalization for private and state-run companies, including Baosteel and CHINT. She is on the advisory board for the construction of the Ocean Economic Development Zone in Zhejiang Province and the Baosteel High-Tech Zone in Guangdong Province.
Part I. Introduction and Theory: 1. Introduction: foreign direct investment
in China and India; 2. Social network theory: diaspora, domestic industry,
and diffusion of FDI liberalization; Part II. Reform Stage I: 3. Diasporic
entrepreneurs and diffusion of FDI liberalization in China; 4. Deregulation
without openness in India; Part III. Reform Stage II: 5. Deepening
diffusion: zone fever and SOE reform in China; 6. Transforming Indian
business: the foundation and limitation of India's FDI liberalization; Part
IV. Sectors: 7. China's electronics and automobiles; 8. FDI liberalization
in India's informatics and autos; 9. Conclusion: state, diasporas, and
development.