Contemporary Chinese Politics
Herausgeber: Carlson, Allen; Lieberthal, Kenneth; Gallagher, Mary E.
Contemporary Chinese Politics
Herausgeber: Carlson, Allen; Lieberthal, Kenneth; Gallagher, Mary E.
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book considers how new and diverse sources and methods are changing the study of Chinese politics.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Contemporary Chinese Politics28,99 €
- A. Carl LevanContemporary Nigerian Politics26,99 €
- Jing HuangFactionalism in Chinese Communist Politics135,99 €
- Joseph FewsmithRethinking Chinese Politics76,99 €
- Jing HuangFactionalism in Chinese Communist Politics49,99 €
- Shanruo Ning ZhangConfucianism in Contemporary Chinese Politics68,99 €
- Shanruo Ning ZhangConfucianism in Contemporary Chinese Politics139,99 €
-
-
-
This book considers how new and diverse sources and methods are changing the study of Chinese politics.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Februar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 658g
- ISBN-13: 9780521197830
- ISBN-10: 052119783X
- Artikelnr.: 30212731
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Februar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 658g
- ISBN-13: 9780521197830
- ISBN-10: 052119783X
- Artikelnr.: 30212731
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introduction Allen Carlson, Mary Gallagher and Melanie Manion; Part I.
Sources: 1. State-generated data and contentious politics in China Xi Chen;
2. Why archives? Neil J. Diamant; 3. The central committee, past and
present: a method of quantifying elite biographies Victor Shih, Wei Shan
and Mingxing Liu; 4. Experimental methods and psychological measures in the
study of Chinese foreign policy Peter Hays Gries; 5. Internet resources and
the study of Chinese foreign relations: can cyberspace shed new light on
China's approach to the world? Allen Carslon and Hong Duan; 6. Information
overload? Collecting, managing, and analyzing Chinese media content Daniela
Stockman; Part II. Qualitative Methods: 7. The worm's-eye view: using
ethnography to illuminate labor politics and institutional change in
contemporary China Calvin Chen; 8. More than an interview, less than
Sedaka: studying subtle and hidden politics with site-intensive methods
Benjamin L. Read; 9. Cases, questions, and comparison in research on
contemporary Chinese politics William Hurst; Part III. Survey Methods: 10.
A survey of survey research on Chinese politics: what have we learned?
Melanie Manion; 11. Surveying prospects for political change: capturing
political and economic variation in empirical research in China Bruce J.
Dickson; 12. Using clustered spatial data to study diffusion: the case of
legal institutions in China Pierre F. Landry; 13. Measuring change and
stability over a decade in the Beijing area study Mingming Shen and Ming
Yang with Melanie Manion; 14. Quantitative research and issues of political
sensitivity in rural China Lily L. Tsai; Reflections on the evolution of
the China field in political science Kenneth Lieberthal; Glossary.
Sources: 1. State-generated data and contentious politics in China Xi Chen;
2. Why archives? Neil J. Diamant; 3. The central committee, past and
present: a method of quantifying elite biographies Victor Shih, Wei Shan
and Mingxing Liu; 4. Experimental methods and psychological measures in the
study of Chinese foreign policy Peter Hays Gries; 5. Internet resources and
the study of Chinese foreign relations: can cyberspace shed new light on
China's approach to the world? Allen Carslon and Hong Duan; 6. Information
overload? Collecting, managing, and analyzing Chinese media content Daniela
Stockman; Part II. Qualitative Methods: 7. The worm's-eye view: using
ethnography to illuminate labor politics and institutional change in
contemporary China Calvin Chen; 8. More than an interview, less than
Sedaka: studying subtle and hidden politics with site-intensive methods
Benjamin L. Read; 9. Cases, questions, and comparison in research on
contemporary Chinese politics William Hurst; Part III. Survey Methods: 10.
A survey of survey research on Chinese politics: what have we learned?
Melanie Manion; 11. Surveying prospects for political change: capturing
political and economic variation in empirical research in China Bruce J.
Dickson; 12. Using clustered spatial data to study diffusion: the case of
legal institutions in China Pierre F. Landry; 13. Measuring change and
stability over a decade in the Beijing area study Mingming Shen and Ming
Yang with Melanie Manion; 14. Quantitative research and issues of political
sensitivity in rural China Lily L. Tsai; Reflections on the evolution of
the China field in political science Kenneth Lieberthal; Glossary.
Introduction Allen Carlson, Mary Gallagher and Melanie Manion; Part I.
Sources: 1. State-generated data and contentious politics in China Xi Chen;
2. Why archives? Neil J. Diamant; 3. The central committee, past and
present: a method of quantifying elite biographies Victor Shih, Wei Shan
and Mingxing Liu; 4. Experimental methods and psychological measures in the
study of Chinese foreign policy Peter Hays Gries; 5. Internet resources and
the study of Chinese foreign relations: can cyberspace shed new light on
China's approach to the world? Allen Carslon and Hong Duan; 6. Information
overload? Collecting, managing, and analyzing Chinese media content Daniela
Stockman; Part II. Qualitative Methods: 7. The worm's-eye view: using
ethnography to illuminate labor politics and institutional change in
contemporary China Calvin Chen; 8. More than an interview, less than
Sedaka: studying subtle and hidden politics with site-intensive methods
Benjamin L. Read; 9. Cases, questions, and comparison in research on
contemporary Chinese politics William Hurst; Part III. Survey Methods: 10.
A survey of survey research on Chinese politics: what have we learned?
Melanie Manion; 11. Surveying prospects for political change: capturing
political and economic variation in empirical research in China Bruce J.
Dickson; 12. Using clustered spatial data to study diffusion: the case of
legal institutions in China Pierre F. Landry; 13. Measuring change and
stability over a decade in the Beijing area study Mingming Shen and Ming
Yang with Melanie Manion; 14. Quantitative research and issues of political
sensitivity in rural China Lily L. Tsai; Reflections on the evolution of
the China field in political science Kenneth Lieberthal; Glossary.
Sources: 1. State-generated data and contentious politics in China Xi Chen;
2. Why archives? Neil J. Diamant; 3. The central committee, past and
present: a method of quantifying elite biographies Victor Shih, Wei Shan
and Mingxing Liu; 4. Experimental methods and psychological measures in the
study of Chinese foreign policy Peter Hays Gries; 5. Internet resources and
the study of Chinese foreign relations: can cyberspace shed new light on
China's approach to the world? Allen Carslon and Hong Duan; 6. Information
overload? Collecting, managing, and analyzing Chinese media content Daniela
Stockman; Part II. Qualitative Methods: 7. The worm's-eye view: using
ethnography to illuminate labor politics and institutional change in
contemporary China Calvin Chen; 8. More than an interview, less than
Sedaka: studying subtle and hidden politics with site-intensive methods
Benjamin L. Read; 9. Cases, questions, and comparison in research on
contemporary Chinese politics William Hurst; Part III. Survey Methods: 10.
A survey of survey research on Chinese politics: what have we learned?
Melanie Manion; 11. Surveying prospects for political change: capturing
political and economic variation in empirical research in China Bruce J.
Dickson; 12. Using clustered spatial data to study diffusion: the case of
legal institutions in China Pierre F. Landry; 13. Measuring change and
stability over a decade in the Beijing area study Mingming Shen and Ming
Yang with Melanie Manion; 14. Quantitative research and issues of political
sensitivity in rural China Lily L. Tsai; Reflections on the evolution of
the China field in political science Kenneth Lieberthal; Glossary.