𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

📁

China’s Social Welfare: The Third Turning Point

✍ Scribed by Joe C. B. Leung, Yuebin Xu


Publisher
Polity Press
Year
2015
Tongue
English
Leaves
224
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The extraordinary rise of China is one of the greatest global stories of recent times. However, China's development has been described as ‘uneven, uncoordinated, and unsustainable’, and has now reached a critical turning point. To transform itself into a successful high-income economy, China urgently needs to develop a new welfare regime. Social policy and social welfare programmes are pivotal not only to meet mounting social needs but also to promote social cohesion.

This timely book explores key turning points in China’s trajectory, from the creation of a socialist egalitarian society promising a relatively stable livelihood at the expense of economic development, through the market-oriented reforms which have dismantled the traditional social protection system. The authors present the formidable social challenges ahead, including demographic shift, residential migration, and corrosive inequalities, and outline the emerging forms of social security protection in urban and rural areas, community-based social care services, non-governmental organizations and the social work profession. To redress inequalities and strengthen social cohesion, China needs to construct a robust developmental and redistributive strategy with shared responsibility between different levels of governments, as well as between civil society, the state and the market.

This comprehensive and astute guide to one of China’s key current challenges will be welcomed by students and scholars of social policy, welfare, sociology and political science, and all interested in contemporary China.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


China's Social Welfare Revolution
✍ Jie Lei, Chak Kwan Chan 📂 Library 📅 2021 🏛 Routledge 🌐 English

<p><span>The Chinese government has recently adopted a radical welfare approach by contracting out social services to non-governmental organisations (NGOs). This is a big departure from its traditional welfare model, whereby all public services were directly delivered by government agencies. This bo

A Study of the Turning Point of China’s
✍ Xiaohuang Zhu, Song Lin, Lin Wang, Wenqi Wu, Quanli Qin 📂 Library 📅 2018 🏛 Springer Singapore 🌐 English

<p>This book proposes a method for calculating China’s debt based on a quantitative econometric analysis. This is conducted by measuring the relationship between China’s debt size and economic growth. The conclusion that is reached is as follows: China’s current debt has already exceeded the inflect

The social sciences at a turning point?.
✍ OECD 📂 Library 📅 1999 🏛 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Develop 🌐 English

The social sciences in OECD countries -- The prospects of European social science -- Challenges and opportunities for the social and behavioural sciences -- Rethinking the social sciences? A point of view -- Social sciences in the Dutch Foresight Exercise -- Social science organisation and policy

Winning at the Turning Point: The Great
✍ Fulin Chi 📂 Library 📅 2019 🏛 Springer Singapore;Palgrave Macmillan 🌐 English

<p><p>This book by influential policymaker Chi Fulin lays out in issue-oriented and detailed chapters, at a time when China is at a crossroads, exactly how the government plans to deal with the social, political and economic issues the world's second-largest economy faces. From managing the decline

From War to Nationalism: China’s Turning
✍ Arthur Waldron 📂 Library 📅 1995 🏛 Cambridge University Press 🌐 English

Scholars have long recognised that Chinese politics changed fundamentally in 1925, when the radical nationalism of the May Thirtieth Movement took political centre stage. This book explains the connection between the beginning of the Nationalist revolution and the introduction of modern World War I