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PEKING UNIVERSITY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   116558


Choices and effects of institutional embeddedness: evidence from China's highly transitional graduate labour market / Fengliang Li; Morgan, W John; Ding, Xiaohao; Hou, Longlong   Journal Article
Fengliang Li Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Following the framework of Brinton and Kariya, and using a nationwide higher education graduates' survey (Graduate School of Education, Peking University in 2003), this article investigates the choices and the effects of institutional embeddedness for higher education graduates in China. Empirical results suggest that institutional embeddedness is more common in the context where employers seek higher-quality labour or where colleges pay attention to their graduates' future employment opportunities. Institutional embeddedness helps graduates find jobs, high-ranking positions and join large enterprises.
Key Words China  Higher Education  Brinton  Kariya  Peking University 
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2
ID:   144174


Photo essay of a failed reform: Beida, Tiananmen Square and the defeat of Deng Xiaoping in 1975-76 / Zweig, David   Article
Zweig, David Article
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Summary/Abstract In mid-1975, Deng Xiaoping, with Mao’s blessing, initiated reforms that targeted the negative consequences of the Cultural Revolution. To bolster Deng’s effort, Mao endowed him with penultimate authority over the Party, government, and military. However, in late October, Mao turned on Deng, and within five months, Mao and the radicals toppled Deng from power. As a foreign student at Peking University, David Zweig observed and photographed four key points in this historic struggle: (1) the initial establishment of a “big character poster” compound at Peking University; (2) emotional mourning for Zhou Enlai in Tiananmen Square following his death: (3) the intensified assault on Deng in February 1976 in the posters at Peking University; and (4) the massive demonstration of support in Tiananmen Square on 3-4 April for the end of Maoist politics.
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