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GUANGDONG PROVINCE (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   110522


As crisis looms, how can SMEs be saved? / Wu, Charlotte   Journal Article
Wu, Charlotte Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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2
ID:   115446


Building bridges: China's rapprochement with Canada / McCulloch, Tony   Journal Article
McCulloch, Tony Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Key Words Energy Security  Trade  China  Canada  Wen Jiabao  Guangdong Province 
Asia - Pacific States 
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3
ID:   129327


Chasing the dragon: illegal drug consumption trends in China / Sheehan, Jackie   Journal Article
Sheehan, Jackie Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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4
ID:   108169


Feng Haojiang et al. versus Guangdong province dongguan city planning bureau in a dispute over the housing demolition administ / Chinese Law and Government   Journal Article
Chinese Law and Government Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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5
ID:   139669


Foreign media coverage and protest outcomes in China: the case of the 2011 Wukan rebellion / Hess, Steve   Article
Hess, Steve Article
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Summary/Abstract By looking at the case of the 2011 Wukan rebellion in Guangdong Province, the following article explores the role played by foreign media in influencing the protest’s ultimate outcome: an intervention from above by provincial authorities in favour of the villagers. Placing Wukan into a four-level model incorporating local, provincial, national, and international dimensions, this article considers howWukan might serve as a model for contention that may influence future acts of popular protest in China in the digital age. It suggests that while appealing directly to foreign media can help claimants increase their leverage over local officials and prompt interventions from above, such actions are likely to modify and accelerate, but not fundamentally transform, existing patterns of localized, community-specific acts of contention seen earlier in the Reform Era.
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6
ID:   108170


Housing demolition contract dispute between Shenyang Kecaisite / Chinese Law and Government   Journal Article
Chinese Law and Government Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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7
ID:   145789


Institutions and provision of public goods in rural China: an empirical study based on villages in Guangdong province / Zhu, Lin; Cai, Yongshun   Journal Article
Cai, Yongshun Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In societies where formal institutions are absent or weak, informal institutions are found to serve as mechanisms that enhance government accountability. Pertinent research on China has come up with similar findings. But two issues have not been adequately addressed in existing research. One is the relationship between formal and informal institutions in shaping government behavior if both types of institutions exist. The other is the factors that affect the (re)emergence of informal institutions. Based on a survey of about 800 villages in Guangdong province, this article shows that the existence of both formal and informal institutions may enhance government accountability in the provision of public goods. Factors such as community history and practical needs contribute to the (re)emergence of informal institutions.
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8
ID:   129092


Pseudo-urbanization or real urbanization: urban China's mergence of administrative regions and its effects, a case study of Zhongshan city, Guangdong province / Liu, Yungang; Jin, lie   Journal Article
Liu, Yungang Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract After the market reforms and opening tip ol" China in the late l97l)s. local governments played a central role in the country's rapid urbanization. particularly through the mergenee of administrative regions (MAR). However. the effect of these MARs is still debatable. ()n the one hand. an MAR can accelerate the pace of economic growth. reshape the power structure. and establish necessary coordination among different regions. On the other hand. a MAR can have negative effects which have led to "pseudo-urbanization" in other developing countries. What is the effect of the local. state-led MAR in China'? This study examines the MAR implemented by the local government of Zhongshan city. Guangdong province. The MAR is found to be associated with the robust growth of the downtown area and of the urban population: it has gradually reshaped the socioeconomic structure of the city. the urban landscape. and the identity of its residents. MARs in China are argu- ably characterizcd b_v a transition from pseudo-urbanization to "real" urbanization. This transition cannot be explained by existing, urban theories. such as the "growth machine." "urban regime," or "entrepreneurial city." Therefore. we use the term "government-led merging urbanization" tGMLz) to define the process. We further suggest that the GML7 concept can be used as a model of urbanization or urban growth. This model provides an important perspective for examining the role played by local governments in the process of urbanization.
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