Beyond the Developmental State: East Asia's Political Economies Reconsidered (International Political Economy Series)
معرفی کتاب «Beyond the Developmental State: East Asia's Political Economies Reconsidered (International Political Economy Series)» نوشتهٔ Steve Chan, Cal Clark, Danny Lam (eds.)، منتشرشده توسط نشر Palgrave Macmillan UK : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan در سال 1998. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
This collection of essays examines the historical influence of states in East Asia's political economies, and considers their contributions to the ongoing social, economic and political transformation of the countries in this region. They show that the status of these so-called developmental states have evolved over time, and that their role and capacity have been significantly related to the social bases and cultural roots of the relevant countries. The Farm War of the early 1980s caused subsequent disruptions in world markets, conflicts among major governments and disagreements in international organizations. The Uruguay Round of GATT negotiations, ostensibly devoted to the new issues of globalization, dragged on from 1986 to 1993 in an attempt to end farm-subsidy battles. Wolfe shows how and why battles over agricultural protectionism were largely resolved through the Round, demonstrating that the global economy is not self-regulating; it needs institutions if it is to be stable. The Green Box, a core provision of The Agreement on Agriculture, shows how states can decide that certain types of policies should be immune from international regulation by the new World Trade Organization, an elegant compromise between the imperatives of responding to global change and maintaining democratic accountability. Wolfe's analysis will be helpful for planners of the next set of farm trade talks, due to begin in 1999, while the annotated text of The Agreement on Agriculture will be especially useful in introducing students to the complexities of trade policy Front Matter....Pages i-xiii Looking beyond the Developmental State....Pages 1-8 Networks, Politics, and Institutions....Pages 9-24 Market, State, and Society in Asian Development....Pages 25-37 More than the Market, More than the State: Global Commodity Chains and Industrial Upgrading in East Asia....Pages 38-59 Peace by Pieces? Mainland—Taiwan Transaction Flows....Pages 60-70 Privatization within the Chinese State....Pages 71-83 Private Governance in Taiwan....Pages 84-95 Changing Parameters of State Power: Presidential Leadership for Technological Development in Korea....Pages 96-108 Japan's Model of Economic Development: Will it Work in the Future?....Pages 109-119 The Cultural Roots of “Guerrilla Capitalism” in Taiwan....Pages 120-130 The Structure and Spirit of Development in Rural Taiwan....Pages 131-141 Elite Strategy and Regime Type in Southeast Asia....Pages 142-154 Back Matter....Pages 155-182 List Of Tables And Figure -- Acknowledgements -- List Of Abbreviations -- Introduction: The Intersection Of Risk And Trade -- Science In The Regulation Of Risk : A Transatlantic Divide? -- Informal Trade Conflict -- Mad Cows And Transatlantic Trade Conflict -- Resolving Differences Over Stinky Cheese And Bothersome Beetles -- Formal Trade Conflict -- The Dispute Over Hormonal Cattle : The Lead Up To Ec-hormones -- Fearing Frankenfoods : Emergence Of Ec-biotech -- Disputing Chlorinated Chickens : The Politics Underpinning Ec-poultry -- Science And The Politics Of Transatlantic Trade Conflict -- Conclusions: Lessons For Trade Conflict -- Moving Forward -- Conclusions -- Notes -- Bibliography. David J. Hornsby, Senior Lecturer In International Relations, University Of Witwatersrand, South Africa. Includes Bibliographical References. Internationally the trade union movement is finding itself peripheralized by a series of mutually reinforcing processes - the ongoing world economic crisis; the uneven transition from an industrial to an information and service capitalism; the aggressive policies of neoliberalism; the collapse of communism and radical nationalism; the decline of the social-democratic or labour tradition - and by a globalization that undermines the nation-state to which union hopes have long been pinned. The editors argue that this crisis provides an opportunity for labour to recover or reinvent itself. They see this in terms of a labour response to the waves of energy coming from the new global social movements (women, ecology, human rights/democracy, and so on). East Asia has featured some of the world's most dynamic economies and, as a result, has attracted much scholarly and official attention to explain this performance. One important analytic tradition argues that strong, autonomous states have played a vital role in the economic ascendance of this region. This collection of essays seeks to contribute to the theory of 'developmental state' by illuminating the social context, the cultural foundation and the global and regional environment that have fostered and shaped the role and influence of government. Sri Lanka is hailed internationally for its high standards of education despite rather modest levels of economic growth. Much of this achievement has been underpinned by economic revenues generated by the labours of the plantation community whose own achievements in education fell well below the national norm. In recent years, however, educational participation among this community has increased. Why, and how? A day in the life of Vickneswari provides the starting-point for an analysis of educational progress among the Tamil plantation community. The authors examine various aspects of Japanese financial markets. This analysis is interspersed with the relevant institutional/historical background on Japanese financial markets necessary for the non-specialist. Principal chapters include: an institutional overview; a chapter on the comparative costs of capital (both internationally and among Japanese firms); causes and implications of the high degree of financial intermediation in Japan; and an invaluable analysis of the most recent trends in the Japanese/Asian financial markets This book examines the effect of post-Soviet transitions on current problem solving trends with regards to world capitalism. The fall of Soviet communism left liberal capitalism as the dominant blueprint from which to construct economic development policies. Using Central Europe as an example it is shown that the application of the Western liberal-capitalist model has not been without its difficulties. This book endeavours to place the changes to the global political economy, since 1989, in a theoretical and historical context
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