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ECONOMY AND SOCIETY IN CONTEMPORARY CHINA

Oggetto:

ECONOMY AND SOCIETY IN CONTEMPORARY CHINA

Oggetto:

Anno accademico 2018/2019

Codice dell'attività didattica
CPS0483
Docente
Prof. Jean Francois Huchet (Titolare dell'insegnamento)
Corso di studi
Corso di laurea magistrale in Scienze internazionali (Classe LM-52)
Anno
1° anno
Tipologia
Caratterizzante
Crediti/Valenza
9
SSD dell'attività didattica
SPS/07 - sociologia generale
Modalità di erogazione
Tradizionale
Lingua di insegnamento
Italiano
Modalità di frequenza
Facoltativa
Tipologia d'esame
Orale
Prerequisiti
This course will employ a multidisciplinary approach combining political economy, history, sociology, and political science to analyse the socio-economic transformation of China from the beginning of the 19th century up to the most recent years. There are no prerequisites either in economics (the course will not use any mathematical materials), sociology, or political science to attend this course.
Sound background in history, international relations and economic history of the 19th and 20th century will help to fully benefit from this course.
Several documents (readings, videos, radio programs) will be made available online before each class on the moodle platform to complement the contents of the course.
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Sommario insegnamento

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Obiettivi formativi

 This course aims to

 - equip students with good analytical and multidisciplinary tools to analyse the failure of China's modernization drive in the 19th and first half of the 20th century, and to assess the rise of People's Republic of China (PRC) in the second half of the 20th century;

 - encourage students to overcome a Eurocentric view of world history and economic development;

 - enable students to analyse and understand economic and social development through a multidisciplinary approach. The case of China will serve as an example to discuss the theories of development proposed by mainstream economic literature.

 

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Risultati dell'apprendimento attesi

At the end of the course, students will be expected to have a good grasp on the political and socio-economic transformations that China has experienced through the 19th and 20th century, with a special focus on the post-1978 phase, when China launched its "Opening and Reform Policy".

Students will be requested to demonstrate sound understanding of how the PRC has been able to catch up with the most advanced industrialized countries in the last quarter of the 20th century after several failed attempts since the mid 19th century. They will need to show awareness of the major socio-political and economic challenges that the PRC is experiencing nowadays, and of the main implications for the rest of the world of China's rise as an economic and political major actor at the regional and global level.

 

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Modalità di insegnamento

Lectures will be held in English.

Several documents (readings, videos, radio programs) will be made available online before each class on the moodle platform to complement the contents of the course.

 

 

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Modalità di verifica dell'apprendimento

Students will have a final exam counting for 80% of the final mark. Three questions related to the content of the course will be asked to the students. 20% of the final mark will be awarded depending on the quality of oral participation by the student during the classes.

Students who cannot attend classes or opt for the status of non-attending students will be evaluated solely by means of a written examination on the following three books:  

Jonathan D. Spence, The search for Modern China, Norton, 1991;

Scott Kennedy, State and Market in Contemporary China, Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2016 (available at https://www.csis.org/node/352513);

Ezra F. Vogel, Deng Xiaoping and the Transformation of China, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011.

 

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Attività di supporto

Students are recommended to attend the TOChina Spring Seminars series.

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Programma

The 54 hours of classes will be divided in five sections:

1. The quest for political and economic modernization in China (1840-1978)

 2. The first stage of reforms (1978 -1992)

 3. The great 1992 compromise: the emergence of China's own brand of authoritarian state capitalism and the transformation of Chinese society

 4. The internationalization of the Chinese economy and society

 5. Assessing future developments and challenges for China

 

 

Testi consigliati e bibliografia

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Important note: these books are not to be read entirely by the students. Specific chapter(s) will be indicated during the course to complement the classes

 - Loren Brandt and Thomas G. Rawski (eds.), China's Great Economic Transformation, (Series Eds), Cambridge University Press, 2008.

 - Frank Dikötter, The Tragedy of Liberation 1945 - 1957, Bloomsbury Press, 2014.

 - Scott Kennedy, State and Market in Contemporary China, Center for Strategic & International Studies, 2016 (available at https://www.csis.org/node/35251).

 - Atul Kohli, State-directed development: political power and industrialization in the global periphery, Cambridge University Press, 2004.

 - Richard McGregor, The party: the secret world of China's communist rulers, Allen Lane, 2010.

 - Barry Naughton, Growing out of the Plan Chinese Economic Reform 1978 -1993, Cambridge University Press, 1995.

 - Carl Riskin, China's Political Economy. The Quest for Develoment since 1949, Oxford University Press, 1987.

 - Jonathan D. Spence, The search for Modern China, Norton, 1991.

 - Kellee S. Tsai, Capitalism without Democracy, Cornell University Press, 2007.

 - Ezra F. Vogel, Deng Xiaoping and the Transformation of China, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011.

 



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Note

Weeks 25/2 – 1/3 e 4/3 – 8/3

Monday 25/2

8.00 – 10.00

Room D1

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room D1

Tuesday 26/2

8.00 – 10.00

Room D1

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room D1

Wednesday 27/2

8.00 – 10.00

Room D1

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room D1

Thursday 28/2

16.00 – 18.00

Room D1

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room D1

Friday 1/3

10.00 – 12.00

Room A4

 

17.00 – 19.00

Room D1

 

Monday 4/3

8.00 – 10.00

Room D1

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room A4

Tuesday 5/3

8.00 – 10.00

Room D1

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room A4

Wednesday 6/3

8.00 – 10.00

Room E5

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room D1

Thursday 7/3

16.00 – 18.00

Room D5

 

18.00 – 20.00

Room D5

Friday 8/3

10.00 – 12.00

Room A4

 

17.00 – 19.00

Room D5

 

8-9-10 May 2019

Wednesday May 8

8.00-10.00 (Aula 7, Einaudi)

14.00-17.00 (Aula 7, Einaudi)

Thursday May 9

15.00 - 20.00  

Friday May 10

8.00-12.00  
 

 

 

  

   

Friday 17/5

9.00 – 11.00

Room D1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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