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The Chinese Economy and “China Economists” as Seen Through the Pages of The China Quarterly

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2009

Extract

To discuss the issues raised by the title of this essay requires us to think of four types of change. These are:

  1. 1. The changing realities of the economy.

  2. 2. The possibilities for assessing and analysing these realities.

  3. 3. The background, training and chosen methodologies of those working in this field.

  4. 4. The role of The China Quarterly in selecting and encouraging particular types of work.

Type
Editorial Reflections on the Occasion of the 50th Anniversary of The China Quarterly
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2009

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References

1 Special Issue on “China and Japan,” The China Quarterly, No. 124 (1990).

2 W. K. [Klatt, Werner] “Communist China's Agricultural Calamities,” The China Quarterly No. 6 (1961), pp. 6475Google Scholar; Alsop, Joseph, “On China's Descending Spiral,” The China Quarterly (1962), pp. 2137CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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5 For example, Special Issues on “The Readjustment” and “The Chinese Economy in the 1990s,” The China Quarterly, No. 100 (1984) and No. 131 (1992).

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10 Morgan, Stephen L. and Liu, Shiying, “Was Japanese Colonialism Good for the Welfare of Taiwanese? Stature and the Standard of Living,” The China Quarterly, No. 192 (2007), pp. 9901017Google Scholar.

11 For example, Shue, Vivienne's wide-ranging Review Essay, “Grasping Reform,” The China Quarterly, No. 144 (1995), pp. 1174–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Oksenberg, Michel's visionary review of Shanghai: Revolution and Development in an Asian Metropolis, The China Quarterly, No. 92 (1982), pp. 723–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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13 “Dishonesty in Academia,” China Daily, 4 February 2009; “Professor apologises for wrong prediction on housing prices,” Xinhua, 8 July 2008.