The goal of this commentary is to examine the historical framing of the “China model” discourse as compared with perceptions of the Western trajectory. It proceeds from two angles. First, the authors seek to problematise the historical basis of what many in the advanced “First World”, particularly in America, used to regard as their superior model of governance. Second, upon re-examining its historical record, the authors posit the alternative “China model” as similarly problematic.11 This double complication circumvents the question whether this recently much-discussed regulatory prototype can be abstracted and empirically concretised. The problem with this question is it presupposes the existence of an internally-coherent and objective te...
The global financial crisis reinvigorated ongoing debates over whether China has its own distinct an...
Hongyi Lai provides a comprehensive interpretation of Chinese and Western scholarship about “the Chi...
Book review on: Wang Mengkui ed. Thirty Years of China\u27s Reform. London and New York: Routledge...
This article complicates existing portrayals of the China developmental "'model" from two angles. Fi...
If one searches for entries which start with the word ‘model ’ in indices of works on contemporary C...
China experienced a successful development in an era when the western world is in apparent declining...
At the end of the Cold War, scholars were pondering how far Western ideas would spread in an interna...
The recent discussion of a “Beijing Consensus” and a China model seems to challenge neoliberalism as...
The Chinese model should be a normative one in its defining characters. Although the present conditi...
China's economic success under an authoritarian political system in the past 30 years has raise...
The 'China Model' literature in English was until recently quite peripheral and rather ahistoric in ...
There is an influential, neo-liberal proposition in the scholarly literature on China’s economic tra...
Analysts generally agree that, in the long term, the biggest challenge to American hegemony is not m...
This thesis studies how conflicts over political ideas influence policy change in China. It argues t...
Many studies of government in China either simply describe the political institutions or else focus,...
The global financial crisis reinvigorated ongoing debates over whether China has its own distinct an...
Hongyi Lai provides a comprehensive interpretation of Chinese and Western scholarship about “the Chi...
Book review on: Wang Mengkui ed. Thirty Years of China\u27s Reform. London and New York: Routledge...
This article complicates existing portrayals of the China developmental "'model" from two angles. Fi...
If one searches for entries which start with the word ‘model ’ in indices of works on contemporary C...
China experienced a successful development in an era when the western world is in apparent declining...
At the end of the Cold War, scholars were pondering how far Western ideas would spread in an interna...
The recent discussion of a “Beijing Consensus” and a China model seems to challenge neoliberalism as...
The Chinese model should be a normative one in its defining characters. Although the present conditi...
China's economic success under an authoritarian political system in the past 30 years has raise...
The 'China Model' literature in English was until recently quite peripheral and rather ahistoric in ...
There is an influential, neo-liberal proposition in the scholarly literature on China’s economic tra...
Analysts generally agree that, in the long term, the biggest challenge to American hegemony is not m...
This thesis studies how conflicts over political ideas influence policy change in China. It argues t...
Many studies of government in China either simply describe the political institutions or else focus,...
The global financial crisis reinvigorated ongoing debates over whether China has its own distinct an...
Hongyi Lai provides a comprehensive interpretation of Chinese and Western scholarship about “the Chi...
Book review on: Wang Mengkui ed. Thirty Years of China\u27s Reform. London and New York: Routledge...