Srl | Item |
1 |
ID:
056188
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2 |
ID:
018468
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Publication |
Jan 2001.
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Description |
26-30
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3 |
ID:
022000
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Publication |
May/June 2002.
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Description |
522-540
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4 |
ID:
057256
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5 |
ID:
022502
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Publication |
Aug 2002.
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Description |
397-493
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Summary/Abstract |
China's entry into the World Trade Organization has been applauded for the benefits it will confer on China's economy and for granting recognition to China's modernizing efforts. The scrutiny of the outside world will force China to regularize many of its practices, such as legal and economic practices. But most of the discussion of the WTO has focused on a very limited segment of China's society. This article considers the realities of rural Chinese life, warning that the consequences of China's increased pressure to reform may be more negative than positive and that the prospect for rural China is far from clear.
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6 |
ID:
023041
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Publication |
June 2002.
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Description |
224-234
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7 |
ID:
022310
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Publication |
Summer 2002.
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Description |
128-145
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8 |
ID:
021073
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Publication |
Jan/Feb 2002.
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Description |
14-24
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9 |
ID:
019218
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Publication |
April 2001.
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Description |
18-21
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10 |
ID:
020241
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Publication |
Oct 2001.
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Description |
24-27
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11 |
ID:
007089
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Publication |
Summer 2000.
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Description |
475-484
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12 |
ID:
021254
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Publication |
Spring 2002.
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Description |
210-236
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13 |
ID:
020571
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Publication |
Nov-Dec 2001.
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Description |
52-58
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14 |
ID:
056908
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15 |
ID:
019400
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Publication |
March/April 2001.
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Description |
231-247
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16 |
ID:
023220
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Publication |
Nov 2002.
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Description |
683-719
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Summary/Abstract |
China's GATT/WTO accession process has been dynamic and complex, affected by the broad political and economic factors at both the international and the domestic levels, and by a complex intertwining of bilateral and multilateral negotiations. This paper attempts to review this 15-year-long negotiation by focusing on the correlation and interaction between three variables--international factors, bureaucratic politics, and societal factors--and the negotiation process. Among them, the author identifies the first two variables as the primary factors shaping negotiation positions, strategies and outcomes, while societal factors such as Congress, interest groups and the public media are also worth noting. They played a minor but growing role in China to affect the ebb and flow of the negotiation process. Furthermore, they functioned differently in the West and in China and these differences themselves also contributed to influencing the negotiation process.
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17 |
ID:
053917
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Publication |
Sep-Oct 2004.
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18 |
ID:
056442
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19 |
ID:
046496
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Publication |
New York, Random House, 2001.
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Description |
xxii, 344p.
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Standard Number |
037550477X
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession# | Call# | Current Location | Status | Policy | Location |
045207 | 338.951/CHA 045207 | Main | On Shelf | General | |
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20 |
ID:
054848
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Publication |
Mar-Apr 2003.
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