"Since the end of the Cold War in 1991, three decades of market reform and greater exposure to the international economy have introduced liberal economic tools in the largest emerging economies in the developing world. China, the world's largest autocracy, Communist by name and one-party authoritarian regime in practice, has liberalized its economy on the macro level and draws in more foreign direct investment (FDI) than any country in the world except the United States. India, the world's most populous multi-party democracy, following decades of economic socialist institutions in the…mehr
"Since the end of the Cold War in 1991, three decades of market reform and greater exposure to the international economy have introduced liberal economic tools in the largest emerging economies in the developing world. China, the world's largest autocracy, Communist by name and one-party authoritarian regime in practice, has liberalized its economy on the macro level and draws in more foreign direct investment (FDI) than any country in the world except the United States. India, the world's most populous multi-party democracy, following decades of economic socialist institutions in the post-Independence period, has also liberalized its macro-economy. Russia, after the breakdown of the Soviet Union, underwent massive economic liberalization, dismantling Communist institutions and launching democratic reforms"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Roselyn Hsueh is Associate Professor of Political Science at Temple University. She is the author of China's Regulatory State: A New Strategy for Globalization (2011). She is the recipient of the Fulbright Global Scholar Award for international fieldwork.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I. Politics of Market Governance: 1. Understanding varieties of market governance in the age of globalization; 2. Perceived strategic value and sectoral structures and organization of institutions; Part II. Nations and Sectors: Patterns of Market Governance: 3. China and sectoral variation: evolution of techno-security developmentalism and the rise of bifurcated capitalism; 4. Security imperatives, infrastructural development, and high-tech sectors: centralized governance in Chinese telecommunications; 5. Political stability, local goals, and labor-intensive sectors: decentralized governance in Chinese textiles; 6. India and sectoral variation: evolution of neoliberal self-reliance and the rise of bifurcated liberalism; 7. Pro-liberalization transnational business and high-tech services: regulated governance in Indian telecommunications; 8. Political legitimacy, economic stability, and labor-intensive small-scale sectors: centralized governance in Indian textiles; 9. Russia and sectoral variation: evolution of resource security nationalism and the rise of bifurcated oligarchy; 10. National security and infrastructure and resource sectors: centralized governance in Russian telecommunications; 11. Regional development and labor-intensive sectors: private governance in Russian textiles; Part III. National Configurations of Sectoral Models: 12. Development, new capitalisms, and future of global conflict and cooperation.
Part I. Politics of Market Governance: 1. Understanding varieties of market governance in the age of globalization; 2. Perceived strategic value and sectoral structures and organization of institutions; Part II. Nations and Sectors: Patterns of Market Governance: 3. China and sectoral variation: evolution of techno-security developmentalism and the rise of bifurcated capitalism; 4. Security imperatives, infrastructural development, and high-tech sectors: centralized governance in Chinese telecommunications; 5. Political stability, local goals, and labor-intensive sectors: decentralized governance in Chinese textiles; 6. India and sectoral variation: evolution of neoliberal self-reliance and the rise of bifurcated liberalism; 7. Pro-liberalization transnational business and high-tech services: regulated governance in Indian telecommunications; 8. Political legitimacy, economic stability, and labor-intensive small-scale sectors: centralized governance in Indian textiles; 9. Russia and sectoral variation: evolution of resource security nationalism and the rise of bifurcated oligarchy; 10. National security and infrastructure and resource sectors: centralized governance in Russian telecommunications; 11. Regional development and labor-intensive sectors: private governance in Russian textiles; Part III. National Configurations of Sectoral Models: 12. Development, new capitalisms, and future of global conflict and cooperation.
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