Fr. 86.00

Law, Policy, and Practice on China''s Periphery - Selective Adaptation and Institutional Capacity

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor Pitman Potter is Director of the Institute of Asian Research and Professor of Law at the University of British Columbia, USA. Klappentext This book examines the Chinese government's policies and practices for relations with the Inner Periphery areas of Tibet, Xinjiang, and Inner Mongolia, and the Outer Periphery areas of Hong Kong and Taiwan focusing on themes of political authority, socio-cultural relations, and economic development. China's history may be seen as one of managing the geographic periphery surrounding China proper. Successive imperial, republican, and communist governments have struggled to maintain sovereignty over the regions surrounding the great river valleys of China. The importance of the periphery is no less real today, concerns over national security, access to natural resources, and long-held concerns about relations between Han and other ethnic groups continue to dominate Chinese law, policy and practice regarding governance in the Inner Periphery regions of Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, and Tibet. In the Outer Periphery, Beijing sees engagement with the outside world (particularly the West) as inextricably tied to Chinese sovereignty over former foreign colonies of Hong Kong and Taiwan. Using the case study of national integration to indicate how policies are articulated and implemented through law and political-legal institutions, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of the peripheral regions. It will also appeal to academic and policy communities interested in legal reform in China Zusammenfassung This book is a comprehensive study of China’s legal and political governance of the ethnic regions of China, especially Inner Mongolia, Tibet and Xinjiang, and analyses its implication for Hong Kong and Taiwan. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction 1. Overview 2. Political Authority in the Inner Periphery 3. Socio-Cultural Relations in the Inner Periphery 4. Economy and Development in the Inner Periphery 5. Implications for the Outer Periphery Conclusion ...

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