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Paperback Red Capitalists in China: The Party, Private Entrepreneurs, and Prospects for Political Change Book

ISBN: 0521521432

ISBN13: 9780521521437

Red Capitalists in China: The Party, Private Entrepreneurs, and Prospects for Political Change

(Part of the Cambridge Modern China Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Viewing the evolving relationship between the Chinese Communist Party and private entrepreneurs, this book examines the implications of recruiting entrepreneurs into the communist party. It has given rise to the label of red capitalists. Although many foreign observers expect economic change to lead inevitably to political change in China, this book reveals that China's entrepreneurs are willing partners with the state; not an autonomous force in...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Wonderful Book - If you are a scholar

You will either hate this book, or love it. If you do not like statistical data, its analysis, and empirical conclusion based on the former two, then this book is not for you. Additionally, this book requires that you possess background knowledge in the subject, otherwise you will often find yourself lost. However, if you are a scholar interested in the subject, you will love this book. I found this book to be an excellent tool in empirically showing the effects of Deng Xiaoping Thought and its subsequent implementation into Chinese policy. The author also does a good job in sticking to the data given, without making empty assumptions. Every Modern China scholar must read this. I gave this book 5 stars based on a scholarly view. If this review was based on a non-scholarly view, I would have to give it a 3.

Searching for efficacy

Dickson's analysis of the rise of the entrepreneurial class, the expansion of privitization, and these factors' possibility for change provides and insightful consideration of capitalism vis-a-vis civil society in China. Though admittedly academic, this sociological examination on how the CCP and the rising capitalists interact and ultimately work to benefit one another. You will need some background in both sociology (or at least a vague understanding of what civil society is) and current Chinese trends. With these two things at your disposal, this book is rather informative.
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