Chinese industrialization has been understood chiefly in terms of China\u27s engagement with more powerful countries, especially Japan and Britain. During the early twentieth century, nevertheless, the development of China\u27s woolen industry-part of a broader program of Chinese industrial development-depended largely on an import trade in raw wool from Australia. Through our study of this industry and trade, we show that a minor world power was more significant to Chinese industrialization than previously imagined
New Zealand was the first nation to recognize China as a market economy under WTO rules and began ne...
This doctoral thesis considers the significance of Australian engagement with China within British i...
This doctoral thesis considers the significance of Australian engagement with China within British i...
This evaluation and economic assessment is of a project funded by the Australian Centre for Internat...
The China Agricultural Economics Group (CAEG) at the University of Queensland has been investigating...
From being an insignificant buyer of Australian wool at the start of the 1980s, China had emerged as...
The Sino-Australian wool trade relationship is the most significant in the international wool indust...
In the new International Division of Labour (IDL ), the traditional pattern that developing countrie...
China is the largest importer of Australian wool. China's demand for wool has significant implicatio...
This thesis examines the trade relationships between China and colonial Australia between 1860 ...
By using little known primary sources in Chinese and English, this thesis will discuss Australia’s d...
During the nineteenth century, exponential growth in sheep pastoralism in Australia and New Zealand,...
Much has been made of the impact of the WTO on trade with China as it further integrates into global...
This study analyses the effects of removing Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) and other barriers on wool impor...
China’s WTO accession is not a commitment to guarantee contractual obligations – it is not a guarant...
New Zealand was the first nation to recognize China as a market economy under WTO rules and began ne...
This doctoral thesis considers the significance of Australian engagement with China within British i...
This doctoral thesis considers the significance of Australian engagement with China within British i...
This evaluation and economic assessment is of a project funded by the Australian Centre for Internat...
The China Agricultural Economics Group (CAEG) at the University of Queensland has been investigating...
From being an insignificant buyer of Australian wool at the start of the 1980s, China had emerged as...
The Sino-Australian wool trade relationship is the most significant in the international wool indust...
In the new International Division of Labour (IDL ), the traditional pattern that developing countrie...
China is the largest importer of Australian wool. China's demand for wool has significant implicatio...
This thesis examines the trade relationships between China and colonial Australia between 1860 ...
By using little known primary sources in Chinese and English, this thesis will discuss Australia’s d...
During the nineteenth century, exponential growth in sheep pastoralism in Australia and New Zealand,...
Much has been made of the impact of the WTO on trade with China as it further integrates into global...
This study analyses the effects of removing Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) and other barriers on wool impor...
China’s WTO accession is not a commitment to guarantee contractual obligations – it is not a guarant...
New Zealand was the first nation to recognize China as a market economy under WTO rules and began ne...
This doctoral thesis considers the significance of Australian engagement with China within British i...
This doctoral thesis considers the significance of Australian engagement with China within British i...