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WANG, WEI (6) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   092776


Confucianism and the solution to the Tibet problem / Wang, Wei   Journal Article
Wang, Wei Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Key Words BBC  Tibet  Dalai Lama  Confucianism  Buddhist 
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2
ID:   146892


Controlling industrial pollution in urban China: towards a more effective institutional milieu in the Guangzhou Environmental Protection Bureau? / Lo, Carlos Wing-Hung; Liu, Ning ; Li, Pansy Hon Ying ; Wang, Wei   Journal Article
Wang, Wei Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article traces the institutional development of environmental regulation in urban China, using data from three rounds of surveys of enforcement officials in the Guangzhou Environmental Protection Bureau in 2000, 2006 and 2013. We found that the changes to institutional contexts of regulatory control appear mainly in the fluctuating degree of support from various non-state actors, but not from government entities and regulated industries. While we detected visible organizational changes in local environmental enforcement bureaus, there was also organizational stability. First, the quality of enforcement officials has improved, as reflected by a higher level of education, first from 2000–2006 and then from 2006–2013. Second, the perceived value of enforcement officials in environmental protection was considerably enhanced in the period 2000–2006, and then remained stable from 2006 to 2013. Third, enforcement obstacles in terms of administrative ambiguity remained virtually unchanged from 2000 to 2013, while enforcement power deficit, resource scarcity and procedural ambiguity became more severe. Overall, the general perception of enforcement effectiveness at both the unit and organizational levels has remained the same over the past 13 years, whereas individual-level enforcement was perceived to have become more effective (with significant changes mainly taking place from 2006 to 2013). On the basis of these empirical results, we found that the institutional conditions for stricter enforcement in Guangzhou were visibly improved from 2000 to 2006, but only modestly improved between 2006 and 2013.
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3
ID:   098594


Evaluating the effectiveness of urban energy conservation and G: the case of Xiamen city, China / Lin, Jianyi; Cao, Bin; Cui, Shenghui; Wang, Wei   Journal Article
Wang, Wei Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract To assess the effectiveness of urban energy conservation and GHG mitigation measures, a detailed Long-range Energy Alternatives Planning (LEAP) model is developed and applied to analyze the future trends of energy demand and GHG emissions in Xiamen city. Two scenarios have been designed to describe the future energy strategies in relation to the development of Xiamen city. The 'Business as Usual' scenario assumes that the government will do nothing to influence the long-term trends of urban energy demand. An 'Integrated' scenario, on the other hand, is generated to assess the cumulative impact of a series of available reduction measures: clean energy substitution, industrial energy conservation, combined heat and power generation, energy conservation in building, motor vehicle control, and new and renewable energy development and utilization. The reduction potentials in energy consumption and GHG emissions are estimated for a time span of 2007-2020 under these different scenarios. The calculation results in Xiamen show that the clean energy substitution measure is the most effective in terms of energy saving and GHG emissions mitigation, while the industrial sector has the largest abatement potential.
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4
ID:   151574


Migration and popular resistance in rural China: Wukan and beyond / Lu, Yao ; Wang, Wei ; Zheng, Wenjuan   Journal Article
Wang, Wei Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This study draws on a case study of Wukan and interviews with migrants and peasants in other sites to examine how migration shapes popular resistance in migrant-sending communities (i.e. rural China). Findings demonstrate multidimensional roles played by migrants and returned migrants who act as a vehicle of informational and ideological transmission and at times directly participate in or even lead rural resistance in origin communities. Both the transmission and participation processes foster political consciousness and action orientations among peasants. The importance of migrants is exemplified in the Wukan protests but is also found in other settings under study. In general, migrants represent a latent political force that acts upon serious grievances back home. The findings provide a useful lens for understanding the diffusion of popular resistance and the linkage between urban and rural activism in China.
Key Words Migration  Rural China  Protest  Migrants  Popular Resistance  Wukan 
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5
ID:   188931


Toward an Empirical Analysis of Income and Time Poverty in Urban China / Wang, Wei   Journal Article
Wang, Wei Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Many earlier studies have assessed Chinese poverty using monetary dimensions, but few have considered the time dimension. This research investigates multidimensional poverty in urban China, using data from the 2013 China Household Income Project, from the standpoints of income and time. A logistic regression model was used to estimate the socioeconomic causes of income poverty, time poverty, and income–constrained time poverty. Empirical results obtained from this study reveal that being a paid female worker or a private enterprise employee and bearing the financial burdens of housing and medical care have significant effects on the probability of being time poor. In addition, workers who have low academic achievement, children, and educational loans are particularly prone to suffering income–constrained time poverty. This study contributes to the assessment of severe poverty situations and suggests an increasing need for working time regulations and more support for less-educated workers in urban China.
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6
ID:   133187


WTO accession, impediments to FDI, and the market opening of ba / Han, Shengfei; Wang, Wei   Journal Article
Wang, Wei Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This paper analyzes why no foreign direct investment (FDI) has entered basic telecom services in China despite relaxed government policies after the World Trade Organization (WTO) accession in 2001. A new indicator of barriers to FDI incorporating the policy and non-policy impediments has been developed with multiple sources of data including a first-hand survey and interview. Analytic hierarchy process has been applied to reduce arbitrariness in assigning weight to each impeding factor. Results indicate that there is no significant reduction in the actual level of openness to FDI in the sector over the past decade of post-WTO period, which is largely attributable to the recessive non-policy factors. Policy implications are discussed.
Key Words WTO  FDI  China  Economic Growth  Government Policies  Chinese Economy 
Analytic Hierarchy  Telecom Services 
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