Wealth Into Power
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. The party's promotion of the private sector; 3. Co-opting the capitalists; 4. Bridges and branches: the CCP's institutional links to the private sector; 5. Views on the economic, political, and social environments; 6. Private entrepreneurs in public service: political participation in China's formal political institutions; 7. The ripple effects of privatization; 8. Conclusion.

Promotional Information

Dickson argues that, rather than promoting democratization, China's entrepreneurs offer key support for the Communist Party's agenda.

About the Author

Bruce Dickson received his PhD from the University of Michigan in 1994. He has been a Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at the George Washington University since 1993, where he also served as director of the Sigur Center for Asian Studies and the Asian Studies Program from 1998-2001 and the director of graduate studies in the political science department from 2004-2006. He is the author of Red Capitalists in China: The Party, Private Entrepreneurs, and Prospects for Political Change (2003) and Democratization in China and Taiwan: The Adaptability of Leninist Parties (1997), as well as numerous articles.

Reviews

"Wealth into Power is a masterful exploration of the convergence of economic and political power in China. Carefully, lucidly, and convincingly, Bruce Dickson demonstrates that economic development in China has generated crony communism rather than demands for democracy though the cozy relationships between private entrepreneurs and party leaders come at huge costs in terms of corruption and inequality. This book should be widely read by anyone trying to understand contemporary China." -Joseph Fewsmith, Professor of Political Science and International Relations, Boston University, and author of China Since Tiananmen "In Wealth into Power, Bruce Dickson describes with remarkable clarity why it is that the economic advances in China will not lead to democratization. He lays out in detail how the Chinese Communist Party has co-opted the country's entrepreneurs and has turned them into a force for preservation of the existing political order rather than as agents of political change. Dickson's cogent book effectively rebuts the common assumption that China, with advancing wealth, will inevitably develop an independent civil society." -James Mann, author of The China Fantasy and author-in-residence, Johns Hopkins University Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies "Wealth into Power provides a penetrating analysis of the complex relationship between the Chinese Communist Party and China's thriving private sector. In this ground-breaking study of the political orientations, social backgrounds, and survival strategies of Chinese private entrepreneurs, Bruce Dickson shows that China's new capitalists, far from becoming a driving force for democratic change, have become part of the authoritarian order. By challenging the conventional wisdom about the relationship between economic development and democratization, Dickson presents a sobering political reality that has often been missed in the current discourse on China's future." -Minxin Pei, senior associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and author of China's Trapped Transition "Bruce Dickson's superb new study is mandatory reading for all serious analysts of China's socio-economic and political future. The study's data are unique, the narrative is nuanced, the analysis is sophisticated, and the findings are sobering. Dickson has put his finger on a key actor in China political future, and finds evidence that the emerging business class is being effectively co-opted by the [Communist] party-state, rather than being proto-democratic agents of political change. A major contribution to our understanding of China's political landscape." -David Shambaugh, Professor of Political Science and International Affiars, George Washington University & The Brookings Institution "Based on original diachronic survey data and years of studying Leninst-style one-party systems, Wealth into Power expertly demonstrates that China's capitalists represent the source of communist resilience rather than a force for political change. Once again, Bruce Dickson's scholarship is a model of clarity, analytic fluency, and empirically-grounded conclusions. Anyone interested in the relationship between the Chinese Communist Party and capitalists should read this book." -Kellee S. Tsai, Professor of Political Science, Johns Hopkins University, and author of Capitalism without Democracy: The Private Sector in Contemporary China "The rapidly changing Chinese political economy places high demands on us to update our understanding of the business-government relationship and its implications for regime change. Wealth into Power is the rare empirical study that meets these demands. In it, Bruce Dickson meticulously follows up, with new surveys of private entrepreneurs and local officials, on conclusions from the 1990s. The new research confirms and strengthens previous arguments: over the past decade, Dickson demonstrates, the communist party has fairly successfully consolidated 'crony communism' in its strategic alliance with the country's most vital economic group-'red capitalists,' whose interests and values are not proto-democratic. Wealth into Power provides strong empirical support for the provocative view of an adaptive and resilient communist party." -Melanie Manion, Professor of Political Science and Public Affairs, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
People also searched for
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top