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CHINESE DOMESTIC POLICIES (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131838


Chinese bureaucracy and the United States / Troush, S   Journal Article
Troush, S Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract FOREIGN POLICY of any state is a product and a common denominator of different and frequently opposite interests. Their combinations vary from country to country even if the process as a whole is affected by general global and social regularities, motivations and mechanisms. The relations between the United States and China have been and will probably remain in the field of interdependence and conflict. Which factors are responsible for these motivations in China? How stable are they and how deeply rooted in the context of internal dynamics and the development logic of the Chinese socium? What social forces and institutions personify and determine them? Which mechanisms do Chinese politicians employ when seeking a compromise and the common denominator in their relationships with the United States?
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2
ID:   120103


Chinese impacts and impacting China / Giese, Karsten   Journal Article
Giese, Karsten Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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3
ID:   128276


Profiling the victims: public awareness of pollution-related harm in China / Munro, Neil   Journal Article
Munro, Neil Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article aims to identify factors which influence public awareness of health or economic harm from pollution in China. Based on an analysis of the China General Social Survey (CGSS) carried out nationwide by Renmin University and HKUST in 2006, it focuses on self-identification as a pollution victim. The analysis tests three groups of hypotheses about how self-identified victims differ from others: first, in terms of the environmental conditions they experience, such as the actual level of pollution and types of neighbourhoods they inhabit; second, in terms of resources, including material and information resources, time, social capital and political experience; and third, in terms of political attitudes. The conclusion discusses implications for the politics of public participation in environmental governance in China.
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