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GIFT GIVING (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   147196


Embedded rubber sandals: trade and gifts across the Sino–Kyrgyz border / Steenberg, Rune   Journal Article
Steenberg, Rune Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract How does a group of Uyghur traders from a village in Atush (Xinjiang, China) end up with a stock of unsellable rubber sandals in Kadamjay (Batken, Kyrgyzstan), and why don’t they compete according to market principles? This article explores the social investments of the traders and their families, and reveals their behaviour to be rational, both economically and socially. It illuminates the business and daily life of Uyghur traders in southern Kyrgyzstan, an environment that is increasingly challenging and uncertain. The examination of exchange relations between their households explains why the traders cooperate as they do and also why they do not cooperate more. Economic rationales and social obligations prove to be mutually embedded. This insight expands and deepens a nascent analytical approach that recognizes social motivation for economic activities in Central Asia alongside undeniable economic incentives. This approach has much to gain from being more explicitly reconnected to classical anthropological theories of gift giving.
Key Words Trade  Kyrgyzstan  Xinjiang  Border  Embeddedness  Gift Giving 
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2
ID:   187536


Role and relation in Confucian IR: Relating to strangers in the states of nature / Shih, Chih-yu   Journal Article
Chih-Yu Shih Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The literature on International Relations theory has yet to align relational theory with role theory, despite the fact that these two theories share so much epistemological common ground. This article uses role theory to bridge the gap between the Confucian and Western conceptions of relationality, whose practitioners regard each other as strangers. With the support of role theory, the comparative analysis of relationality in this article has mainly focused on two different types of relations: prior rule-based relations and improvised relations. The differences in the cultural preparation for these two relations partially explain the plurality of the relational universe and the perception of stranger. Role theory is one way to reconnect the seemingly irreconcilable relational universes. To illustrate the value of a composite agenda of relational theory and role theory, the article will use Kim Jong-un of North Korea as its case. Confucian relations propose that, for all nations, the necessity of having a certain role relation is a more important agenda than insisting on exactly what role to take.
Key Words Confucianism  State of Nature  Relational Theory  Role Theory  Stranger  Tianxia 
Gift Giving 
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