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Description

Can China and the United States bridge their political differences? Are those differences as large as conventional wisdom suggests? Thirty years after formal U.S.-Chinese diplomatic relations were established, A Bridge Too Far? addresses these essential questions by bridging the academic divide separating scholars who study these countries from Chinese and Western political science perspectives. Rather than bringing together China specialists exclusively, then, this book allows a broad range of scholars using Western analytical tools to examine Chinese politics and political theory in relation to the United States. It also allows Chinese scholars to examine specific policy areas related to countries and thereby confirm or contest the broader analysis offered by their outsider counterparts.

Some of the contributors are Chinese specialists, a number having played key roles as advisors to the central government, others students of American politics, and stilll others political economists or political theorists who are not involved directly in area studies. Finally, some are academically trained but work in China in the area of environmental regulation or are legal advisors for state-owned businesses. In all, the contributors bring extensive experience with China, and all see commonalities beneath the obvious and deep differences between the two nations. Emerging from an ongoing face-to-face dialog, the book unites this unusual group to uncover genuine areas of overlap between the politics of the two nations without diminishing the very real distance separating them. The essays included discuss topics such as China's democratic prospects and the rise of local village elections, the role of interest groups, Chinese political and legal reforms and developments regarding intellectual property rights and environmental regulation, Western and Chinese political philosophy, and Sino-American foreign policy interactions.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Introduction
Part 2 Democracy and Political Reform
Chapter 3 Chapter 1. Democracy in China? Go Figure
Chapter 4 Chapter 2. Public Administration Reform in China
Chapter 5 Chapter 3. Grassroots Democracy in China: A Comparative Study of Villagers' and Residents' Committees
Chapter 6 Chapter 4. Hayek and theDaodejing on Order and Coercion
Part 7 The Rule of Law
Chapter 8 Chapter 5. Legal Reform in China
Chapter 9 Chapter 6. China's Intellectual Property Rights Protection and Sino-U.S. Relations
Part 10 Interest Groups and the Policy Process
Chapter 11 Chapter 7. Interests, Groups, and Information Aggregation
Chapter 12 Chapter 8. China's Environmental Protection and Sino-U.S. Cooperation
Chapter 13 Chapter 9. The Development of the Public Service in China
Part 14 International Relations
Chapter 15 Chapter 10. Reciprocity and Adaptation in Post Cold War U.S.-China Foreign Policy Interactions

Product details

Published Mar 16 2009
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 244
ISBN 9780739128879
Imprint Lexington Books
Dimensions 10 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Robert Grafstein

Anthology Editor

Fan Wen

Contributor

Scott Ainsworth

Contributor

David Kapust

Contributor

Qintang Kong

Contributor

Ruoxi Li

Contributor

Xiaojun Li

Contributor

Shen Ningzhen

Contributor

Jianfeng Wang

Contributor

Chen Xingbo

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