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ID184391
Title ProperWhy Did China’s Rise Succeed and Iran’s Fail? the Political Economy of Development in China and Iran
LanguageENG
AuthorAmineh, Mehdi Parvizi
Summary / Abstract (Note)There are many shared historical experiences and similarities between Iran and China. Both are legacies of the long-lasting empires and civilisations in West and East Asia, respectively. Like other great Asian empires, Iran and China were confronted with the expansion of the European imperial powers in the early-nineteenth century which ultimately led to the dislocation of these ancient empires. Both countries had resisted pressures towards peripheralization in the global economy by the creation of nationalist popular revolutions and by building modern nation states and identities in the first half of the twentieth century, despite different political systems, cultures, and external relations. Both Iran and China have been trying to escape from the external pressures and internal socio-economic backwardness by the modernization of their states, societies, and economies via a state-led catch-up development strategy. These efforts led to the rise of China in the late-20th century and the emergence of post-Islamic revolutionary Iran 1978/79 as a ‘contender state' to the hegemony of the United States (US) in West Asia. This development raises two key questions: why did China succeed in rising as an industrialised regional and global power, and has Iran’s development strategy failed so far?
`In' analytical NoteAsian Affairs Vol. 53, No.1; Mar 2022: p. 28-50
Journal SourceAsian Affairs Vol: 53 No 1
Key WordsChina’s Rise ;  Political Economy of Development ;  Iran’s Fail ;  China and Iran


 
 
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