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WANG, MARK (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   052263


China's transition to a global economy / Webber, Michael (ed.); Wang, Mark (ed.); Ying, Zhu (ed.) 2002  Book
Webber, Michael Book
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Publication New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.
Description xii, 274p.
Standard Number 1403901678
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046322330.951/WEB 046322MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   070949


Marine corps sourcing competitionsr: historical performance and directions for improvement / Moore, Nancy Y; Eden, Rick; Wang, Mark 1999  Book
Wang, Mark Book
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Publication Santa Monica, Rand Corporation, 1999.
Description xiv, 68p.
Standard Number 0833026925
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041982359.9662120973/MOO 041982MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   173257


Negotiation and Exchange in Nail Household Conflict Resolution: ‘Bargained Authoritarianism’ and ‘Accident Avoidance’ in Urban China / Wu, Xiaolong; Li, Chen; Wang, Mark   Journal Article
Wang, Mark Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Based on in-depth field research in an urban housing demolition and relocation project in J community, Jiangsu province, this article explores the strategies, mindset, and considerations employed by three levels of local authorities (the neighbourhood committee, the district and municipal governments) in resolving conflict with tough nail households. Such investigation highlights the combined discourse surrounding the ‘bargained authoritarianism’ concept and ‘accident avoidance’ principle in the context of ‘maintaining social stability’ (weiwen in Chinese) in China. The conclusion of this article adds to the interpretation of the perpetuating conflicting relationship between central and local in China. This article thus suggests that a shift in approach is required when local authorities establish legal procedures and regulations to manage increasing social conflict in China.
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4
ID:   178173


Over-cascading system of cadre evaluation and China’s authoritarian resilience / Rui Qi; Shi, Chenchen ; Wang, Mark   Journal Article
Wang, Mark Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract China’s cadre evaluation system – the personnel management system used to assess the performance of government officials in the party-state – is considered an important tool for upper-level governments to supervise and regulate lower-level agents. This system is one of the key factors contributing to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) authoritarian resilience. Deficiencies of this system are exemplified by the ‘blind pursuit of GDP’, selective implementation, gaming, collusion, and data fabrication. The CCP has been reforming this system to strengthen its monitoring and political control over local government cadres, especially at the county level, and it is a crucial component in the step-by-step hierarchical power structure. While current literature focuses largely on the assessment content of such reform, this article pays specific attention to the changes in the cascading evaluation structure of province to prefecture to county. The article identifies a new dynamic of ‘over-cascading’ whereby provincial governments bypass prefectural governments and directly evaluate county officials, resulting in the co-existence of prefecture-county and province-county evaluations. This article also explores the functioning mechanism of this dual structure and argues that this structural change in the cadre evaluation system is breaking the traditional hierarchical governance structure and enhancing authoritarian resilience of the CCP because it provides a new route for over-cascading governance between provincial and county governments. This research contributes to the conceptualization of the over-cascading governing structure of the CCP and fills gaps in the literature on structural changes in China’s cadre evaluation system.
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5
ID:   070765


Technology transfer of federally eunded R & D: perspectives from a forum / Wang, Mark; Pfleeger, Shari; Adamson, David M; Bloom, Gabrielle 2003  Book
Bloom, Gabrielle Book
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Publication Santa Monica, Rand Corporation, 2003.
Description xvi, 147p.
Standard Number 083303359X
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046574338.97306/WAN 046574MainOn ShelfGeneral