Read more
In this volume East Asia is used as a unit of political and economic analysis to reveal an approach to modernization that is distinct from the Western model. The volume especially focuses on the interaction between nations of East Asia; the advantages and limits of export-led growth; relations between such processes as state formation, industrial growth, urbanization, and the movement from status- to class-based social hierarchies; and the links between state, market, and civic culture.
Each chapter takes at least one country as its topic. There also is a comparative and regional perspective provided within many of the contributions. All the chapters present fresh insights and analyses with intellectual and historical depth. Modernization in East Asia contains useful theoretical frameworks and empirical data for scholars, practitioners, and students.
List of contents
Preface
East Asia as a Region for Economic, Political, and Social Analysis by Richard Harvey Brown
Japan, East Asia's Newly Industrializing Countries, and the United States in the World Political Economy by Gavin Boyd
Government-Business Relations in Japan: The Case of Financial Deregulation by Frances McCall Rosenbluth
Imperatives of Development and the Formation of Social Policy: East Asia's Newly Industrialized Countries by Frederic C. Deyo
Korea's Experience and Future Prospects of Economic Development by Taewon Kwack
The Social Foundations of Institutional Action: Argentina and South Korea in the Postwar Era by Miguel E. Korzeniewicz and Roberto P. Korzeniewicz
Export-Oriented Industrialization and Political and Class Development: Hong Kong on the Eve of 1997 by B. Karin Chai
Thailand the World: The Transformation to Modernity by Eliezer B. Ayal
The Ambiguities of Modernization: The Political Class and Regime Change in the Philippines by Albert Celoza
China in the Pacific Regional Economy by Gavin Boyd
References
Index
About the author
RICHARD HARVEY BROWN is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Maryland, College Park, and President of the Washington Institute for Social Research. His current research interests are in the comparative political economy and cultural psychology of developing societies and advanced capitalist states. He has written or edited six volumes in this area. Dr. Brown is internationally reknowned as a theorist of the social sciences and has lectured in major universities of Europe, East Asia, Latin America, and the United States.
WILLIAM T. LIU is a founder of the Center for East-West Studies in Hong Kong. His research interests are in social change and East-West relations as they are associated with international migration. Dr. Liu's academic life includes more than a decade of teaching at the University of Notre Dame, where he served as Chairman of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Letters, Director of the Social Science Research and Training Institute, and Director of the Center for the Study of Man in Contemporary Society. He has written or edited 8 volumes, and more than 100 papers in scientific journals, chapters in books, and proceedings.