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Guanxi, Networks and Economic Development: The Impact of Cultural Connections

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TLDR
In this article, the authors explore the mechanics of guanxi in an organizational setting, focusing on the use of interpersonal relationships within Chinese firms to discover how firms initiate, build and use Guanxi networks.
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to explore the mechanics of guanxi in an organizational setting, focusing on the use of interpersonal relationships within Chinese firms to discover how firms initiate, build and use guanxi networks. Two richly detailed case studies document changes that take place over time in two distinct networks with respect to key actors and their contacts. This research also investigates patterns of social structure that emerge over time in these two distinct cases looking at brokerage relationships, network density, and dyadic redundancy in three waves at six month intervals. The cases are dissimilar in all aspects except absolute size demonstrating the universal use of guanxi across time, geographic location, specific industries, and firm experience. Dynamic network visualization is used to highlight the sequence and rate of activity in each network to identify salient changes. The findings show that firms seek to improve their organizational guanxi by improving existing employees’ guanxi quality within the firm and by recruiting new actors from outside the firm. Additionally, firms use organizational guanxi to expand their networks by forming cooperative partnerships with complementary organizations that enhance the attributes or potential of both organizations. And finally, firms initially exploit brokerage in organizational guanxi, then attempt to stabilize the network by fostering new ties to exclusive contacts.

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The search for modern China

Peter Lowe
TL;DR: The authors explored the history of early-modern and modern China, from the seventeenth century to the present, examining the rise and fall of China's last empire, the emergence of a modern nation-state, the sources and development of revolution, and the implications of complex social, political, cultural, and economic transformations in the People's Republic of China.
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Chinese commercial negotiating style = 談判作風

Lucian W. Pye
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Choice, Rationality and Social Theory

TL;DR: The rational choice approach to social behaviour rationality, egoism and social atomism models of the actor rationality, action and deliberation individualism, and social structure was proposed in this article.
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I. the problem of china

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China's Old Dwellings

TL;DR: A comprehensive critical examination of China's folk architectural forms is presented in this article, where the authors provide a study of the environmental, historical and social factors that influence housing forms for nearly a quarter of the world's population.
References
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Normative rational choice theory: Past, present, and future

Bojan Krstić, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2015 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors tried to explain the normative turn in more recent work on experimental economics and behavioral economics and concluded that economists have traditionally equated the notion of normative with ethically.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dealing with Responsibility for the Great Leap Famine in the People's Republic of China

Felix Wemheuer
- 01 Mar 2010 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the question of how the different levels of the Chinese state, such as the central government, the province and the county, have dealt with responsibility for the famine.
Book

From Emperor to Citizen: The Autobiography of Aisin-Gioro Pu Yi

TL;DR: Pu Yi as mentioned in this paper was the last emperor of the Ch'ing Dynasty to abdicate and was subsequently re-educated in Chinese prisons, where he learned how to dress himself, work on an assembly line, and criticize his former uselessness and pride.