The idea of only one way leading to a modern society seems to be hardly tenable. But even if we agree to this, our theories and terms describing modernization are gained on our own Western history. So social science has to reconsider its basic terms to describe Chinaâs modernization, and maybe even the understanding of modernization itself.
The second of two volumes on Chinaâs modernization collects articles by leading Chinese and Western scientists focusing on the main conflicts and differences this process involves.
In the first section â âOn Contemporary Theory of Modernizationâ â Manussos Marangudakis represents Shmuel N. Eisenstadtâs concept of âMultiple Modernities and the Theory of Indeterminacyâ, one of the best elaborated perspectives on modernity.
âChanging China: Dealing with Diversityâ, the second section, examines how China copes with dissent and discusses the significance of law and a civil society. Merle Goldman begins with âDissent of Chinaâs Public Intellectuals in the Post-Mao Eraâ. The âModernization of Law in China â its Meaning, Achievements, Obstacles and Prospectâ is the subject of Qingbo Zhang. Scott Wilson presents a Gramscian analysis of civil society in âChinaâs State in the Trenchesâ. And Francis Schortgen and Shalendra Sharma study how China is âManufacturing Dissent: Domestic and International Ramifications of Chinaâs Summer of Labor Unrestâ.
âNeoliberalism and the Changes in East Asian Welfare and Educationâ is the focus of the third section. Beatriz Carrillo Garcia investigates the âBusiness Opportunities and Philanthropic Initiativesâ in China. âTime, Politics and Homelessness in Contemporary Japanâ is the subject of Ritu Vij. Different school books show the âEducational Modernisation Across the Taiwan Straitsâ by David C. Schak. And Ho-fung Hung discusses the role of China in globalization following the question: âIs China Saving Global Capitalism from the Global Cri-sis?â
The additional rubric âOn Contemporary Philosophyâ involves three articles about âInternational Development, Paradox and Phronesisâ by Robert Kowalski, âThe World in the Headâ by Robert Cummins, and âCommunication, Cooperation and Conflictâ by Steffen Borge.
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