- published: 25 May 2016
- views: 713
The politics of the People's Republic of China takes places in a framework of a socialist republic run by a single party, the Communist Party of China. The leadership of the Communist Party is stated in the Constitution of the People's Republic of China. State power within the People's Republic of China (PRC) is exercised through the Communist Party, the Central People's Government and their provincial and local representation. The Communist Party of China uses Internal Reference to manage and monitor internal disagreements among the people of People's Republic of China.
Under the dual leadership system, each local Bureau or office is under the coequal authority of the local leader and the leader of the corresponding office, bureau or ministry at the next higher level. People's Congress members at the county level are elected by voters. These county level People's Congresses have the responsibility of oversight of local government, and elect members to the Provincial (or Municipal in the case of independent municipalities) People's Congress. The Provincial People's Congress in turn elects members to the National People's Congress that meets each year in March in Beijing. The ruling Communist Party committee at each level plays a large role in the selection of appropriate candidates for election to the local congress and to the higher levels.
David Shambaugh: Chinese Politics In 2016
Learning About Chinese Politics: Sources, Methods, and Perceptions
Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix
Black Hair Dye, Bloodshed, and Ruthless Rivalries, i.e. Chinese Politics | China Uncensored
Chinese politics
Bo Xilai, the downfall of a 'princeling' of Chinese politics
What Happens When China Becomes Number One? | Institute of Politics
Understanding Chinese Nationalism: Historical Memory in Chinese Politics and Foreign Relations
Learning About Chinese Politics: Area Studies, Theory and Local Knowledge
Assessing China: Internal Politics and Peripheral Relations
David Shambaugh 댕寬 teaches political science and is director of the China Policy Program at George Washington University. He previously taught at the University of London and edited the leading journal in the field, The China Quarterly. His many influential books include China Goes Global: The Partial Power, China’s Communist Party: Atrophy and Adaptation, and Modernizing China’s Military: Progress, Problems, and Prospects. His latest, China’s Future and the 6th edition of The China Reader: Rising Power are just out.
Producing Knowledge about China: Social Science Perspectives Roundtable: Learning About Chinese Politics: Sources, Methods, and Perceptions Moderator: Stanley Lubman, Lecturer in Residence, Berkeley Law, University of California Meaning and Measurement: Interviews and Political Science Research in China Mary E. Gallagher, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Director, Center for Chinese Studies, The University of Michigan Conscious and Subconscious Sources of American Attitudes towards China: Identity, Ideology, Contact, & the Media Peter Gries, Associate Professor, Harold J. & Ruth Newman Chair Director, Institute for US-China Issues, University of Oklahoma This event was sponsored by Institute of East Asian Studies and Center for Chinese Studies http://...
China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face. Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg?sub_confirmation=1 And subscribe to Bloomberg Politics for the latest political news: http://www.youtube.com/BloombergPolitics?sub_confirmation=1 Bloomberg is the First Word in business news, delivering breaking news & analysis, up-to-the-minute market data, features, profiles and more: http://www.bloomberg.com Connect with us on... Twitter: https://twitter.com/business Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloombergbusiness Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergbusiness/ Bloomberg Television brings you coverage of the biggest business st...
How to win friends and influence people...the Chinese Communist Party way! Chen Xitong, one of the masterminds behind the Tiananmen Square Massacre has died, leaving behind a legacy of, well, tank-crushed students. Subscribe for more China Uncensored: http://www.youtube.com/ntdchinauncensored Make sure to share with your friends! ______________________________ Want more China Uncensored? http://e.ntd.tv/NTDChinaUncensored Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChinaUncensored Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ChinaUncensored Main Channel: http://www.youtube.com/ntdonchina Email: chinauncensored@ntdtv.com ____________________________________ MOBILE LINKS: More China Uncensored! What is the June 4th Incident and Why is It Censored? http://e.ntd.tv/11sobby Cute Chinese Kids Brainwashed into...
Lecture on Chinese political culture, parties, elecctions, etc.
Former mayor of Chongqing (China) Bo Xilai seemed destined for the top echelon of Chinese politics until his spectacular fall from grace last month. Bo Xilai, the son of famed China Communist Party figure Bo Yibo, made his name as leader of the port city of Dalian before taking over the western metropolis of Chongqing. Ably abetted by his lawyer wife Gu Kailai, Bo's four-year spell in charge of Chongqing was marked by his populist policies, a war on organized crime, welfare largesse for the poor and a return to veneration of Mao Zedong and China's revolutionary era. But the Bo fairytale started to unravel a few weeks ago when his crime-fighting police chief Wang Lijun attempted to defect at the US embassy in Chengdu. Wang reportedly decided enough was enough when he discovered Bo's wife...
Kishore Mahbubani, Dean and Professor in the Practice of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, discussed the history of China’s rise, and how the United States’ current behavior will influence the future actions of China. The Forum was moderated by Dean David Ellwood.
How did the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) not only survive but also regain the support of many Chinese citizens after the Tiananmen Square crackdown of 1989? Why has popular domestic sentiment turned toward anti-Western nationalism despite the ant...
Producing Knowledge about China: Social Science Perspectives Roundtable: Learning About Chinese Politics: Area Studies, Theory and Local Knowledge Moderator: Wen-hsin Yeh, Director, Institute of East Asian Studies, Haas Chair in East Asian Studies, Morrison Chair in History, University of California, Berkeley The Peephole Method: Producing Ethnographic Knowledge about Rural China Hans Steinmüller, Research Fellow, Department II Socialist and Post‐Socialist Eurasia, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology Local People Producing Local Knowledge John Kennedy, Associate Professor, University of Kansas, and co-director of the Northwest Socio-economic Development Research Center (NSDRC), Xian, China Studying Chinese Politics in an Age of Specialization Kevin OBrien, Al...
Experts discuss China’s political reforms under President Xi Jinping, the Chinese Communist Party’s relationship with political and religious dissidents in Xinjiang, Tibet, Taiwan, and Hong Kong, and the implications for stability in mainland China. Speakers: Carl Minzner, Professor of Law, Fordham University Evan Osnos, Staff Writer, New Yorker Presider: Bonnie S. Glaser, Senior Fellow for Asia and Freeman Chair in China Studies, Center for Strategic and International Studies
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://skyble.space/sabk/35/en/B00COGP82I/trial Discusses interpretations of the Yijing (the I Ching or Book of Changes) during the Northern Song period and how these illuminate the momentous changes in Chinese society during this era.this book is the first comprehensive study of Yijing (book of Changes) commentary during the Northern Song period, showing how it reflects a coming to terms with major political and social changes. Seen as a transitional period in Chinas history, the Northern Song (9601127) is often described as the midpoint in the Tang-song transition or as the beginning of Song-ming Neo-confucianism. Challenging this traditional view, Tze-ki Hon demonstrates the complexity of the Northern Song by breaking it into three periods characterized...
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://yazz.space/sabk/35/en/B00HFFCHCW/info Beginning with the bloody communist purges of the Jiangxi era of the late 1920s and early 1930s and moving forward to the wild excesses of the Cultural Revolution, Policing Chinese Politics explores the question of revolutionary violence and the political passion that propels it. who are our enemies, who are our friends, that is a question germane to the revolution, wrote Mao Zedong in 1926. Michael Dutton shows just how powerful this one line was to become. It would establish the binary division of life in revolutionary China and lead to both passionate commitment and revolutionary excess. The political history of revolutionary China, he argues, is largely framed by the attempts of Mao and the Party to harness ...
http://j.mp/2eUCzai
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://yazz.space/sabk/35/en/B002AY9JBA/info This volume provides a coherent and comprehensive understanding of Chinese security policy, comprising essays written by one of America's leading scholars.chinese Security Policy covers such fundamental areas as the role of international structure in state behavior, the use of force in international politics (including deterrence, coercive diplomacy, and war), and the sources of great-power conflict and cooperation and balance of power politics, with a recent focus on international power transitions. The research integrates the realist literature with key issues in Chinese foreign policy, thereby placing Chinas behaviour in the larger context of the international political system. Within this framework, Chinese ...
Chinese Religious Life Chapter 10 - The Social Organization of Religious Communities in the Twentieth Century Written by Vincent Goossaert
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://yazz.space/sabk/35/en/B01BNUXU4S/info This book tells the story of how a regional Chinese theatrical form, Shanghai Yue Opera, evolved from the all-male beggars song of the early twentieth century to become the largest all-female opera form in the nation, only to face increasing pressure to survive under Chinese political and economic reforms in the new millennium. Previous publications have focused mainly on the historical development of Chinese theatre, with emphasis placed on Beijing opera. This is the first book to take an interdisciplinary approach to the story of the Shanghai Yue Opera, bringing history, arts management, central and regional government policy, urbanisation, gender, media, and theatre artistic development in one. Through the st...
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://yazz.space/sabk/35/en/B00ULD2P7C/info Renowned for his coverage of China's elite politics and leadership transitions, veteran Sinologist Willy Lam has produced the first book-length study in English of the rise of Xi Jinpinggeneral Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (ccp) since November 2012. With rare insight, Lam describes Xi's personal history and his fascination with quasi-maoist values, the factional politics through which he ascended, the configuration of power of the Fifth-generation leadership, and the country's likely future directions under the charismatic "princeling."despite an undistinguished career as a provincial administrator, Xi has rapidly amassed more power than his predecessors. He has overawed his rivals and shaken up the ...
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://zaxo.space/sabk/35/en/B00979KJ1A/book Over the post-mao period, the Chinese state has radically cut back its role in funding health services and insuring its citizens against the costs of ill health. Using an analytical framework drawn from studies of state retrenchment in industrialized democracies and in post-communist Eastern Europe, Jane Duckett argues that the states retreat from health in China was not a simple consequence of economic policies and market reform. Just as important were the influences of health policies, reform era political institutions, communist party ideology, and bureaucratic stakeholders. Through her analysis, Duckett maintains that by studying retrenchment in China, the worlds most populous nation and now a major global e...
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://appgame.space/mabk/30/en/B0181NKZ9I/book Before the First Opium War (18391842), China had control over the terms of its relationship with Western powers, refusing to grant foreigners extraterritorial privileges or sign international treaties fully recognizing their political status. This dynamic has been largely overlooked in prior studies that emphasize Chinas semicolonial vulnerability after the First Opium War, but it has important implications for the attitudes and policies that have dominated Sino-western relations over the past three centuries. Li Chen draws a richly textured portrait of Sino-western relations during the century before 1843. Focusing on the role of law in Sino-western encounters, Chen brings fresh insight to the legal disputes...
Gady Epstein speaks about the future of China's political system at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on November 12, 2015. Gady Epstein is the media editor at The Economist. Prior to that he took over as Beijing bureau chief of The Economist in 2014. In that role and before that as China correspondent since 2011, he has written about politics and society, with special interests in inequality, public policy and the internet. Previously, he served as Beijing bureau chief for Forbes for four years. He began covering China and Asia, with a sub-specialty in North Korea, in 2002, first as Beijing bureau chief for The Baltimore Sun, then as international projects reporter for the newspaper. He studied English language and literature at Harvard.
It's a standard assumption in the West: As a society progresses, it eventually becomes a capitalist, multi-party democracy. Right? Eric X. Li, a Chinese investor and political scientist, begs to differ. In this provocative, boundary-pushing talk, he asks his audience to consider that there's more than one way to run a succesful modern nation. TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design -- plus science, business, global issues, the arts and much more. Find closed captions and translated subtitles in many languages at http://www.ted.com/translate Follow TED news on Twitter: http://www.twit...