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MANCHU (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   072652


Identity reproducers beyond the grassroots: the middle class in the Manchu revival since the 1980s / Bai, Lian   Journal Article
Bai, Lian Journal Article
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Publication 2005.
Summary/Abstract A diagnosis of the ethnic empowerment fuelled by the Chinese Manchu middle-class elite provides a useful tool for examining the overall Manchu identity revival movement in the 1980s. The strategy of the Manchu middle-class elite has three parts: re-crafting ethnic identity by strengthening networks and cultural differences, pursuing ethnic economic development, and politically legitimating the group existence. This article explores several important questions concerning the strategy. Why is the ethnic middle class keen to provide vigorous leadership in the ethnic identity reconstruction movement? How do the people of this class invest their bitter grievances with new meaning and empower themselves in the process of bargaining and group confrontation with the State? How can they make their ethnic identity more likely to be 'institutionalised' into the ethnic mosaic of the People's Republic of China (PRC) in the Open and Reform era?
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2
ID:   190413


Incomplete Catching Up: Income among Yi, Manchu and Han People in Rural China, 2002–2018 / Gustafsson, Björn A   Journal Article
Björn A. Gustafsson Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper explores household income per capita for the rural Yi and Manchu ethnic minority groups and the Han majority using data from the China Household Income Project 2002, 2013 and 2018. The disparity between total per capita income for the Yi and Han populations narrowed, while the average per capita income for the Manchu population remained relatively similar to that of the Han population. Decomposing total income to its sources shows that the rapid increase in agricultural income among the Yi was a main reason why the disparity in income, compared to the two other ethnic groups, narrowed. Nevertheless, reliance on agricultural income among the Yi was reduced as wage employment and migration increased. The Manchu group and the Han group also experienced rapid increases in wages and self-employment income. The aggregated value of transfers from the public sector was similar for all three ethnic groups.
Key Words Ethnic Minorities  Rural China  Manchu  Income Disparity  Han  Yi 
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3
ID:   028149


Korean phoenix: a nation from the ashes / Keon, Michael 1978  Book
Keon Michael Book
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Publication New Delhi, Prentuce-Hall of India Private Ltd., 1978.
Description vi, 234p.hbk
Key Words Japan  China  Korea - History  Manchu 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
017759951.9043/KEO 017759MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   104569


Mongols of Xinjiang / Soni, Sharad K   Journal Article
Soni, Sharad K Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Key Words China  Xinjiang  Manchu  Mongols 
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