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E-raamat: Yunnan-A Chinese Bridgehead to Asia: A Case Study of China's Political and Economic Relations with its Neighbours

(Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Chandos Asian Studies Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-May-2013
  • Kirjastus: Woodhead Publishing Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780857094452
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Chandos Asian Studies Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-May-2013
  • Kirjastus: Woodhead Publishing Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780857094452
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The Chinese province of Yunnan has been undergoing a dynamic process of repositioning, from a Southwestern periphery of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to a “bridgehead” between China and its neighbors in Southeast and South Asia. This repositioning has found expression in ideas about the province's geopolitical positioning, policy frameworks, involvement in transborder institutions, infrastructure development and commerce.

The author, Tim Summers, traces this process and its implications, demonstrating the extent of provincial agency in reform-era China and the growing global importance of "'south-south" economic and commercial interactions. The introductory chapters overview China's changing global relationships, summarize Yunnan's history and key elements in its regional and global interactions and outline the development since the 1980s of ideas concerning Yunnan's geopolitical positioning. The next three chapters consider three main areas of political economy in turn: transnational institutions, infrastructure and transport development and regional and bilateral ties between Yunnan and Southeast and South Asia.

Arvustused

"Yunnan is one of China's most strategically important regions, occupying a critical area where it serves as a bridgehead between the rest of the country and the diverse and complicated economies and polities of south and southeast Asia. Tim Summers has intimate experience of working in the region and has produced an excellent, readable and comprehensive study, locating this ethnically rich province in its historic and regional context, but then using Yunnan to illustrate the complex interdependencies of provinces in modern China and the ways in which they relate to the central government, to other provinces, and to the wider world. An important and rewarding new study." --Kerry Brown, University of Sydney

"This is a succinct, clearly-written and well-presented discussion of how a province is able to articulate its own goals while working within a national system where many of the macro-economic policy levers like interest rates, growth targets and tax raising powers are still in the hands of the central government." --Asian Review of Books

Muu info

Utilizes Yunnan's case to demonstrate the extent of provincial agency in global interactions in reform-era China, and provides new insights into both China's relationships with its Asian.
List of figures and tables
xi
List of abbreviations
xiii
Note on use of Chinese xv
Acknowledgements xvii
About the author xix
Map of Asia
xxi
Yunnan timeline xxiii
Yunnan place names in Chinese xxv
1 Introduction: why Yunnan?
1(12)
Previous studies on Yunnan
6(2)
A provincial case study of China's political and economic relations
8(2)
Structure of the book
10(1)
Notes
11(2)
2 China in a changing world
13(16)
Western China and the global economy
17(2)
China and its Asian neighbours
19(6)
Provincial agency in China's global interactions
25(2)
Notes
27(2)
3 Yunnan's history in regional perspective
29(24)
From Dian kingdom to Mongol conquest
30(4)
From Ming integration to `inward rebalancing' in the Qing
34(5)
Late Qing decline and European incursions
39(3)
Reform, revolution and the war period in Yunnan
42(4)
Yunnan from 1949
46(6)
Notes
52(1)
4 Repositioning Yunnan: ideas and policy
53(30)
Early ideas of `opening up' in Yunnan
54(4)
Turning point: 1992
58(3)
Developing ideas and policy
61(7)
The `great international transit route' and CAFTA
68(3)
National belonging
71(3)
Repositioning continued
74(4)
Conclusion
78(1)
Acknowledgements
79(1)
Notes
80(3)
5 Yunnan and regional institutions
83(34)
Early regional engagement: Greater Mekong Subregion
84(3)
Yunnan and BCIM
87(8)
New dynamics in the region(s) - CAFTA and a revitalised GMS
95(8)
Guangxi and regional institutions
103(5)
Yunnan and domestic regionalism
108(2)
Conclusion
110(3)
Notes
113(4)
6 Infrastructure development
117(30)
The early 1990s: limited transport infrastructure
118(7)
Transport infrastructure in 2001
125(6)
Further developments: 2006 and beyond
131(7)
Energy security and infrastructure development
138(1)
Challenges: politics and international relations
138(6)
Conclusion
144(1)
Notes
144(3)
7 From border trade to `going out'
147(28)
New trends from 2001
155(5)
`Going out': outward investment from Yunnan
160(8)
Domestic trade and Investment
168(5)
Conclusion
173(1)
Notes
174(1)
8 Conclusion
175(16)
Provincial agency and `competitive internationalisation'
179(5)
China, Asia and global political economy
184(5)
Notes
189(2)
References 191(30)
Index 221
Tim Summers writes on the politics, economy, and international relations of contemporary China. He is a Senior Consulting Fellow with Chatham House in London, teaches at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), and advises corporates and investors on China. Tim holds a PhD in Chinese Studies from CUHK, and an MA from the University of Cambridge. He was British Consul-General in Chongqing from 2004 to 2007, when he traveled extensively in southwest China, including in Yunnan.