Beyond Regimes: China and India Compared
β Scribed by Prasenjit Duara (editor), Elizabeth J. Perry (editor)
- Publisher
- Harvard University Asia Center
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 359
- Series
- Harvard Contemporary China Series
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
For many years, China and India have been powerfully shaped by both transnational and subnational circulatory forces. This edited volume explores these local and global influences as they play out in the contemporary era. The analysis focuses on four intersecting topics: labor relations; legal reform and rights protest; public goods provision; and transnational migration and investment. The eight substantive chapters and introduction share a common perspective in arguing that distinctions in regime type (βdemocracyβ versus βdictatorshipβ) alone offer little insight into critical differences and similarities between these Asian giants in terms of either policies or performance. A wide variety of subnational and transnational actors, from municipal governments to international organizations, and from local NGO activists to a far-flung diaspora, have beenβand will continue to beβdecisive.
The authors approach China and India through a strategy of βconvergent comparison,β in which they investigate temporal and spatial parallels at various critical junctures, at various levels of the political system, and both inside and outside the territorial confines of the nation-state. The intensified globalization of recent decades only heightens the need to view state initiatives against such a wider canvas.
β¦ Table of Contents
Beyond Regimes: China and India Compared
Contents
List of Tables and Figures
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
List of Abbreviations
Beyond Regimes: An Introduction
PART I: LABOR RELATIONS
1. The Origins of State Capacity: Workers and Officials in Mid-20th-Century Shanghai and Bombay
2. Labor and State Absenteeism: The Intersecting Social Experience of Construction Workers in India and China
PART II: LEGAL REFORM AND RIGHTS PROTEST
3. Contesting the Right to Law: Courts and Constitutionalism in India and China
4. State-Embedded Villages: Rural Protests and Rights Awareness in India and China
PART III: PUBLIC GOODS PROVISION
5. Parallel Trajectories: The Development of the Welfare State in China and India
6. Higher Education Reform in China and India: The Role of the State
PART IV: TRANSNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INVESTMENT
7. Rescaling State-Society Relations in China and India
8. Foreign Direct Investment in China and India: History, Economics, and Politics
Appendix: India-China Timeline, 1947β2016
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This edited volume reconsiders the conventional wisdom that argues that the comparative performance of China has been superior to that of India, bringing together new paradigms for evaluating two countries in terms of economics, social policy, politics, and diplomacy. Essays show that if not outrigh
This edited volume reconsiders the conventional wisdom that argues that the comparative performance of China has been superior to that of India, bringing together new paradigms for evaluating two countries in terms of economics, social policy, politics, and diplomacy. Essays show that if not outrigh
Comparing Asian Politics presents an invaluable comparative examination of politics and government in three Asian nations: India, China, and Japan. The author elucidates the links between politics and each nation's distinctive cultural and historical contexts and demonstrates the intermingling and g
<p>This edited volume reconsiders the conventional wisdom, which argues that comparative performance (in economic, social, political, as well as diplomatic arenas) of China has been superior to that of India. The book brings together 'new paradigms' for evaluating the comparative performance of two
This paper undertakes a comparative empirical assessment of economic reforms and exports in the rising Asian giants, China and India. It explores the past record and future challenges. In recent years, China has surged ahead of India to dominate world manufactured exports, but India has acquired co