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Drawing on in-depth fieldwork in rural China, this book examines the formulation, implementation and outcomes of government-run microcredit programmes in China-illuminating the diverse roles that microcredit plays in local processes of socioeconomic development and the livelihoods of local actors.
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Drawing on in-depth fieldwork in rural China, this book examines the formulation, implementation and outcomes of government-run microcredit programmes in China-illuminating the diverse roles that microcredit plays in local processes of socioeconomic development and the livelihoods of local actors.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 284
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 593g
- ISBN-13: 9789463722513
- ISBN-10: 9463722513
- Artikelnr.: 57093976
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 284
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 593g
- ISBN-13: 9789463722513
- ISBN-10: 9463722513
- Artikelnr.: 57093976
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Nicholas Loubere is an Associate Senior Lecturer in the Study of Modern China at the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies, Lund University. His research examines socioeconomic development in rural China, with a particular focus on microcredit and migration.
Front Material 1. Introduction 1.1 Contested and Paradoxical Rural
Development in China 1.2 The Rise of the Global Microfinance Movement and
the Adoption of Microcredit in Rural China 1.3 Research Questions and
Objectives 1.4 Research Methodology and Fieldwork Sites 1.5 Book Outline 2.
Rural Financial Services in China: Historical and Literature Review 2.1 The
Trajectories and Contours of the Rural Financial Landscape since 1949 2.2
Research on Rural Financial Services in China 2.3 Conclusion 3. Making
Microcredit: Policy Formulation and Implementation 3.1 The Formulation of
Microcredit Policy 3.2 A Tale of Three Townships: Microcredit
Implementation at the Local Level 3.3 Conclusion 4. Variation in
Microcredit Implementation: Understanding Heterogeneity from a Relational
Perspective 4.1 Differentiated Financial Landscapes and Segmented Financial
Markets 4.2 Strategising and Rationalising Pressures and Incentives 4.3
Interpersonal Relationships and Negotiations at the Interface 4.4 Emergence
and Complexity in Implementation Outcomes 4.5 Conclusion 5. Microcredit as
Modernisation and De-marginalisation 5.1 The Linear Progression Development
Paradigm 5.2 Local Interpretations of Microcredit as a Means of
De-marginalisation 5.3 Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Capital,
Knowledge, and Technology Transfers 5.4 Microcredit as De-marginalisation
Through the Formation of New Socio-political and Socioeconomic Linkages 5.5
Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Employment, Local Cooperation,
and Financial Inclusion 5.6 Microcredit and Local Livelihood Improvement
5.7 Conclusion 6. Microcredit, Precarious Livelihoods and Undercurrents of
Marginalisation 6.1 The Unequal Foundations of Development and Relational
Marginality 6.2 The Rural-Urban Dichotomy and Relational Marginality in the
Chinese Context 6.3 Microcredit as Resource Diversion and Extraction 6.4
Microcredit as Elite Capture and Exclusion 6.5 Microcredit as Precarity,
Risk, and Exploitation 6.6 Conclusion 7. Conclusion 7.1 In Summary 7.2 Key
Findings 7.3 Directions for Future Research End Material - Bibliography -
Interview Lists - Index
Development in China 1.2 The Rise of the Global Microfinance Movement and
the Adoption of Microcredit in Rural China 1.3 Research Questions and
Objectives 1.4 Research Methodology and Fieldwork Sites 1.5 Book Outline 2.
Rural Financial Services in China: Historical and Literature Review 2.1 The
Trajectories and Contours of the Rural Financial Landscape since 1949 2.2
Research on Rural Financial Services in China 2.3 Conclusion 3. Making
Microcredit: Policy Formulation and Implementation 3.1 The Formulation of
Microcredit Policy 3.2 A Tale of Three Townships: Microcredit
Implementation at the Local Level 3.3 Conclusion 4. Variation in
Microcredit Implementation: Understanding Heterogeneity from a Relational
Perspective 4.1 Differentiated Financial Landscapes and Segmented Financial
Markets 4.2 Strategising and Rationalising Pressures and Incentives 4.3
Interpersonal Relationships and Negotiations at the Interface 4.4 Emergence
and Complexity in Implementation Outcomes 4.5 Conclusion 5. Microcredit as
Modernisation and De-marginalisation 5.1 The Linear Progression Development
Paradigm 5.2 Local Interpretations of Microcredit as a Means of
De-marginalisation 5.3 Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Capital,
Knowledge, and Technology Transfers 5.4 Microcredit as De-marginalisation
Through the Formation of New Socio-political and Socioeconomic Linkages 5.5
Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Employment, Local Cooperation,
and Financial Inclusion 5.6 Microcredit and Local Livelihood Improvement
5.7 Conclusion 6. Microcredit, Precarious Livelihoods and Undercurrents of
Marginalisation 6.1 The Unequal Foundations of Development and Relational
Marginality 6.2 The Rural-Urban Dichotomy and Relational Marginality in the
Chinese Context 6.3 Microcredit as Resource Diversion and Extraction 6.4
Microcredit as Elite Capture and Exclusion 6.5 Microcredit as Precarity,
Risk, and Exploitation 6.6 Conclusion 7. Conclusion 7.1 In Summary 7.2 Key
Findings 7.3 Directions for Future Research End Material - Bibliography -
Interview Lists - Index
Front Material 1. Introduction 1.1 Contested and Paradoxical Rural
Development in China 1.2 The Rise of the Global Microfinance Movement and
the Adoption of Microcredit in Rural China 1.3 Research Questions and
Objectives 1.4 Research Methodology and Fieldwork Sites 1.5 Book Outline 2.
Rural Financial Services in China: Historical and Literature Review 2.1 The
Trajectories and Contours of the Rural Financial Landscape since 1949 2.2
Research on Rural Financial Services in China 2.3 Conclusion 3. Making
Microcredit: Policy Formulation and Implementation 3.1 The Formulation of
Microcredit Policy 3.2 A Tale of Three Townships: Microcredit
Implementation at the Local Level 3.3 Conclusion 4. Variation in
Microcredit Implementation: Understanding Heterogeneity from a Relational
Perspective 4.1 Differentiated Financial Landscapes and Segmented Financial
Markets 4.2 Strategising and Rationalising Pressures and Incentives 4.3
Interpersonal Relationships and Negotiations at the Interface 4.4 Emergence
and Complexity in Implementation Outcomes 4.5 Conclusion 5. Microcredit as
Modernisation and De-marginalisation 5.1 The Linear Progression Development
Paradigm 5.2 Local Interpretations of Microcredit as a Means of
De-marginalisation 5.3 Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Capital,
Knowledge, and Technology Transfers 5.4 Microcredit as De-marginalisation
Through the Formation of New Socio-political and Socioeconomic Linkages 5.5
Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Employment, Local Cooperation,
and Financial Inclusion 5.6 Microcredit and Local Livelihood Improvement
5.7 Conclusion 6. Microcredit, Precarious Livelihoods and Undercurrents of
Marginalisation 6.1 The Unequal Foundations of Development and Relational
Marginality 6.2 The Rural-Urban Dichotomy and Relational Marginality in the
Chinese Context 6.3 Microcredit as Resource Diversion and Extraction 6.4
Microcredit as Elite Capture and Exclusion 6.5 Microcredit as Precarity,
Risk, and Exploitation 6.6 Conclusion 7. Conclusion 7.1 In Summary 7.2 Key
Findings 7.3 Directions for Future Research End Material - Bibliography -
Interview Lists - Index
Development in China 1.2 The Rise of the Global Microfinance Movement and
the Adoption of Microcredit in Rural China 1.3 Research Questions and
Objectives 1.4 Research Methodology and Fieldwork Sites 1.5 Book Outline 2.
Rural Financial Services in China: Historical and Literature Review 2.1 The
Trajectories and Contours of the Rural Financial Landscape since 1949 2.2
Research on Rural Financial Services in China 2.3 Conclusion 3. Making
Microcredit: Policy Formulation and Implementation 3.1 The Formulation of
Microcredit Policy 3.2 A Tale of Three Townships: Microcredit
Implementation at the Local Level 3.3 Conclusion 4. Variation in
Microcredit Implementation: Understanding Heterogeneity from a Relational
Perspective 4.1 Differentiated Financial Landscapes and Segmented Financial
Markets 4.2 Strategising and Rationalising Pressures and Incentives 4.3
Interpersonal Relationships and Negotiations at the Interface 4.4 Emergence
and Complexity in Implementation Outcomes 4.5 Conclusion 5. Microcredit as
Modernisation and De-marginalisation 5.1 The Linear Progression Development
Paradigm 5.2 Local Interpretations of Microcredit as a Means of
De-marginalisation 5.3 Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Capital,
Knowledge, and Technology Transfers 5.4 Microcredit as De-marginalisation
Through the Formation of New Socio-political and Socioeconomic Linkages 5.5
Microcredit as De-marginalisation Through Employment, Local Cooperation,
and Financial Inclusion 5.6 Microcredit and Local Livelihood Improvement
5.7 Conclusion 6. Microcredit, Precarious Livelihoods and Undercurrents of
Marginalisation 6.1 The Unequal Foundations of Development and Relational
Marginality 6.2 The Rural-Urban Dichotomy and Relational Marginality in the
Chinese Context 6.3 Microcredit as Resource Diversion and Extraction 6.4
Microcredit as Elite Capture and Exclusion 6.5 Microcredit as Precarity,
Risk, and Exploitation 6.6 Conclusion 7. Conclusion 7.1 In Summary 7.2 Key
Findings 7.3 Directions for Future Research End Material - Bibliography -
Interview Lists - Index







