Asia after the developmental state : disembedding autonomy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Asia after the developmental state : disembedding autonomy
(Cambridge studies in comparative public policy / general editors, M. Ramesh, Xun Wu, Michael Howlett)
Cambridge University Press, 2017
- : hardback
Available at / 6 libraries
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National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
: hardback332.2||C2201445887
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: hardbackAA||338.92||A441942244
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Asia after the Developmental State presents cutting-edge analyses of state-society transformation in Asia under globalisation. The volume incorporates a variety of political economy and public policy oriented positions, and collectively explores the uneven evolution of new public management and neoliberal agendas aimed at reordering state and society around market rationality. Taken together, the contributions explore the emergence of marketisation across Asia, including China, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam - what is now often described as the world's most economically dynamic region - and the degree to which marketisation has taken root, in what forms, and how this is impacting state, society and market relationships.
Table of Contents
- 1. Disembedding autonomy: Asia after the developmental state Toby Carroll and Darryl S. L. Jarvis
- Part I. Conceptualizing State Transformation in Asia: Multipolarity, Neoliberalism and Contestation: 2. The origins of East Asia's developmental states and the pressures for change Richard Stubbs
- 3. Globalization and development: the evolving idea of the developmental state Shigeko Hayashi
- 4. Late capitalism and the shift from the 'development state' to the variegated market state Toby Carroll
- 5. Capitalist development in the twenty-first century: states and global competitiveness Paul Cammack
- 6. From Japan's 'Prussian path' to China's 'Singapore model': learning authoritarian developmentalism Mark Thompson
- 7. What does China's rise mean for the developmental state paradigm? Mark Beeson
- Part II. Cases of State Transformation in Contemporary Asia: 8. The state and development in Malaysia: race, class and markets Darryl S. L. Jarvis
- 9. Survival of the weakest? The politics of independent regulatory agencies in Indonesia Jamie Davidson
- 10. The Pandora's box of neoliberalism: housing reforms in China and South Korea Siu-yau Lee
- 11. Health care and the state in China M. Ramesh and Azad Bali
- 12. Wither the developmental state? Adaptive state entrepreneurship and social policy expansion in China Ka Ho Mok
- 13. Public-private partnerships in the water sector in Southeast Asia: trends, issues and lessons Schuyler House and Wu Xun
- 14. Higher education and the developmental state: the view from East and Southeast Asia Anthony Welch
- 15. State, capital, and the politics of stratification: a comparative study of welfare regimes in marketizing Asia Jonathan London
- 16. Modifying recipes: insights on Japanese electricity sector reform and lessons for China Scott Victor Valentine.
by "Nielsen BookData"