China's crisis management

Author(s)

    • Chŏng, Chae-ho

Bibliographic Information

China's crisis management

[edited by ] Jae Ho Chung

(China policy series, 20)

Routledge, 2012

  • : cloth

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The continuation of China's successful rise depends considerably on the capacity of the Chinese government to prevent and manage a wide range of potential and actual crises, which could, if mishandled, have serious adverse consequences for China. These potential crises are both domestic - where the example of the collapse of the Soviet Union is well understood and remembered in China - and, increasingly, as a result of China's ever closer involvement in the global system. This book presents a comprehensive overview of crisis management in China, and examines China's mode of managing economic, political and military crises, as well as natural disasters, ethnic-minority issues, environmental and public health problems. In each area it considers the nature of potential crises and their possible effects, and the degree to which China is prepared to cope with crises.

Table of Contents

1. China's Anti-crisis Macro-Economic Management: Effectiveness and Limitation 2. Managing Political Crises in China: The Cases of Collective Protests 3. Chinese Military Crisis Behavior: From Confrontation and Conflict Prevention to Win-Win Management 4. Managing Ethnic Minority Crises: The Tibetan Areas and Xinjiang 5. Managing Pandemic/Epidemic Crises: Institutional Setup and Overhaul 6. China's Management of Environmental Crises: Risks, Recreancy, and Response 7. China's Management of Natural Disasters: Organizations and Norms

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