Relationships between political and business elites are crucial in determining a nation's political-economic trajectory. Especially for authoritarian regimes that feature capitalist growth, understanding such relationships and why they change over time can tell us much about the fundamental nature of a regime and its degree of stability. In Precarious Ties, Meg Rithmire offers a novel account of the relationships between business and political elites in three authoritarian regimes in developing Asia. She introduces two conceptual models that explain the variation and instability found in state-business relations in authoritarian regimes.…mehr
Relationships between political and business elites are crucial in determining a nation's political-economic trajectory. Especially for authoritarian regimes that feature capitalist growth, understanding such relationships and why they change over time can tell us much about the fundamental nature of a regime and its degree of stability. In Precarious Ties, Meg Rithmire offers a novel account of the relationships between business and political elites in three authoritarian regimes in developing Asia. She introduces two conceptual models that explain the variation and instability found in state-business relations in authoritarian regimes.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Meg Rithmire is the F. Warren McFarlan Associate Professor in Business, Government, and International Economy at Harvard Business School. She is the author of Land Bargains and Chinese Capitalism: The Politics of Property Rights under Reform. Her work on state-business relations, finance in Asia, and China's internationalization has been published in World Politics, Comparative Politics, and International Security, among other journals.
Inhaltsangabe
* Abbreviations * Tables * Figures * Glossary * Acknowledgements * Chapter One: The Foundations of State-Business Relations in Authoritarian Asia * Chapter Two: The Origins of Trust and Distrust: The Making of Capitalist Classes in Asia, 1945-1970 * Chapter Three: Mutual Endangerment in Indonesia: State-Business Relations with Distrust * Chapter Four: Malaysia: Mutual Alignment and Competitive Clientelism * Chapter Five: China's Capitalists under Reform: The Life and Death of Mutual Alignment * Chapter Six: Elite Disintegration: The Moral Economy of Mutual Endangerment in China * Chapter Seven: Crisis and Reconfiguration: The Chinese Communist Party versus Business * Chapter Eight: Conclusion: Power and Moral Economy in Authoritarian Capitalism * Appendices * Bibliography * Index
* Abbreviations * Tables * Figures * Glossary * Acknowledgements * Chapter One: The Foundations of State-Business Relations in Authoritarian Asia * Chapter Two: The Origins of Trust and Distrust: The Making of Capitalist Classes in Asia, 1945-1970 * Chapter Three: Mutual Endangerment in Indonesia: State-Business Relations with Distrust * Chapter Four: Malaysia: Mutual Alignment and Competitive Clientelism * Chapter Five: China's Capitalists under Reform: The Life and Death of Mutual Alignment * Chapter Six: Elite Disintegration: The Moral Economy of Mutual Endangerment in China * Chapter Seven: Crisis and Reconfiguration: The Chinese Communist Party versus Business * Chapter Eight: Conclusion: Power and Moral Economy in Authoritarian Capitalism * Appendices * Bibliography * Index
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