Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma

China is a country in great transformation. Over the last three decades the highly remarkable economic performance of the once low-income and inward-looking state of China has attracted increasing interest from academics and policymakers. China’s astounding transformation is reflected not only in h...

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Main Author: Yeoh, Emile Kok Kheng
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/13966/1/ICS-QNU-2012-Conf-EmileKKYeoh.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/13966/
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spelling my.um.eprints.139662019-11-05T01:19:42Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/13966/ Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma Yeoh, Emile Kok Kheng DS Asia China is a country in great transformation. Over the last three decades the highly remarkable economic performance of the once low-income and inward-looking state of China has attracted increasing interest from academics and policymakers. China’s astounding transformation is reflected not only in her economy, but also in her social changes in the past few decades, and this inevitably is also going to have implications for the country’s domestic sociopolitical development. For instance, the country’s breakneck economic transformation and the accompanying income and wealth disparities could be engendering increasingly volatile intergroup relations that would result in intensified resource contest which in turn may see groups coalesce along socioracial and ascriptive lines and thus further polarized by such divides, aggravated by transnational influences brought about by the selfsame globalization that has ironically contributed to her very economic “miracle” in the first place. Adapting Green’s change process model (2008) and Reeler’s threefold theory of social change (2007) to the China context, this paper investigates how various dimensions of social change have been engendered by the three decades of Chinese economic reform and how these various facets of social change are impacting on the coming direction and trajectory of the country’s socioeconomic and political transformation, how the interplay of State policy and societal response within the context of the exigencies engendered by the country’s continued odyssey of development, modernization and reform is shaping the future of the civil society, and how from both the theoretical and empirical perspectives the complex polity-economy-society nexus involved in the transformation of modern China are having wider ramifications for the country’s future. 2012-04 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/13966/1/ICS-QNU-2012-Conf-EmileKKYeoh.pdf Yeoh, Emile Kok Kheng (2012) Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma. In: International Conference Socioeconomic Development, Ethnicity and Social Cohesion: China and Malaysia in Perspective, 25-26 Apr 2012, University of Malaya. (Submitted)
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic DS Asia
spellingShingle DS Asia
Yeoh, Emile Kok Kheng
Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma
description China is a country in great transformation. Over the last three decades the highly remarkable economic performance of the once low-income and inward-looking state of China has attracted increasing interest from academics and policymakers. China’s astounding transformation is reflected not only in her economy, but also in her social changes in the past few decades, and this inevitably is also going to have implications for the country’s domestic sociopolitical development. For instance, the country’s breakneck economic transformation and the accompanying income and wealth disparities could be engendering increasingly volatile intergroup relations that would result in intensified resource contest which in turn may see groups coalesce along socioracial and ascriptive lines and thus further polarized by such divides, aggravated by transnational influences brought about by the selfsame globalization that has ironically contributed to her very economic “miracle” in the first place. Adapting Green’s change process model (2008) and Reeler’s threefold theory of social change (2007) to the China context, this paper investigates how various dimensions of social change have been engendered by the three decades of Chinese economic reform and how these various facets of social change are impacting on the coming direction and trajectory of the country’s socioeconomic and political transformation, how the interplay of State policy and societal response within the context of the exigencies engendered by the country’s continued odyssey of development, modernization and reform is shaping the future of the civil society, and how from both the theoretical and empirical perspectives the complex polity-economy-society nexus involved in the transformation of modern China are having wider ramifications for the country’s future.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Yeoh, Emile Kok Kheng
author_facet Yeoh, Emile Kok Kheng
author_sort Yeoh, Emile Kok Kheng
title Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma
title_short Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma
title_full Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma
title_fullStr Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma
title_full_unstemmed Social change and social contradictions: The China dilemma
title_sort social change and social contradictions: the china dilemma
publishDate 2012
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/13966/1/ICS-QNU-2012-Conf-EmileKKYeoh.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/13966/
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