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1 |
ID:
022052
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Publication |
July-Aug 2002.
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Description |
9-15
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2 |
ID:
052059
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Publication |
May-Jun 2004.
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3 |
ID:
051539
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Publication |
May-Jun 2004.
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Summary/Abstract |
This election year may tempt both critics of the Bush administration and hard-liners within it to attack U.S. policy on China. That would be a mistake, however, for engaging Beijing has worked well. Economic growth in China has spurred political liberalization, legal reform, opening of the media, and popular activism. The Bush administration -- and those who aspire to replace it -- should not let electoral tactics jeopardize sound policy. With respect to China, that means staying the course.
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4 |
ID:
055511
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5 |
ID:
051900
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Publication |
May 2004.
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Summary/Abstract |
When the research on which this paper is based began in late 2001, the working title was "Major Adversities Confronting China's Continued Rapid Economic Growth." Recognizing the frequently neglected but nonetheless important function of book titles, and after consultation with publicists both within and outside RAND including colleagues in China, the author and collaborators changed the book's title to the perhaps more appealing one affixed to this paper, as well. The term "fault lines" refers to adversities, vulnerabilities, and obstacles to sustained economic growth, and these words are used synonymously in this paper.
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6 |
ID:
056043
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7 |
ID:
050860
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8 |
ID:
020775
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Publication |
2001.
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Description |
363-279
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9 |
ID:
066715
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10 |
ID:
056042
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