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Journal ArticleDOI

Market Transition and Societal Transformation in Reforming State Socialism

Victor Nee, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1996 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 1, pp 401-435
TLDR
This paper argued that a paradigm shift is taking place within research on China, from state-centered analysis to a theoretical approach that locates causal forces within a macro-societal framework.
Abstract
The far-reaching institutional change and societal transformation occurring in former state-socialist societies have attracted new social science interest in transition economies. This chapter reviews recent research on China, highlighting the theoretical arguments and findings of general interest to social scientists. The paper argues that a paradigm shift is taking place within research on China, from state-centered analysis to a theoretical approach that locates causal forces within a macrosocietal framework. Within a macrosocietal framework, state socialism is viewed as a distinctive institutional arrangement in which society, economy, and the state are integrated through society-wide redistributive arrangements. Forces in economic and political change emanate not only from political actors but from economic and social actors as well. The chapter reviews work in which a macrosocietal approach is used to address stratification, societal transformation, and marketization in reforming Chinese state socia...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Education and Stratification in Developing Countries: A Review of Theories and Research

TL;DR: In this paper, a review examines research on education and inequality in developing regions, focusing on empirical studies of educational inequality in four broad areas: macro-structural forces shaping education and stratification; the relationship between family background and educational outcomes; school effects; and education's impact on economic and social mobility.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Emergence of a Market Society: Changing Mechanisms of Stratification in China

TL;DR: The authors examines the effect of institutional change in altering the mechanisms of stratification and concludes that "New institutionalists maintain that interests are embedding interests in the system, rather than the system itself".
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic Transformation and Income Inequality in Urban China: Evidence from Panel Data

TL;DR: Li et al. as mentioned in this paper examined changes in income determinants between the pre-reform and reform eras, and found significant changes in returns to education and in the rise of private/hybrid firms in the reform era.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chinese social stratification and social mobility

TL;DR: This paper reviewed post-1980 research on class stratification, socioeconomic inequalities, and social mobility in the People's Republic of China and found that occupational mobility, a rare opportunity under Mao, is becoming a living experience for many Chinese in light of emerging labor markets.
Book

Cooperation Without Trust

TL;DR: In a recent panel on trust at the Midwest Political Science Association conference, two practitioners, scheduled to share experience on how good city management improves citizen trust, were genuinely disturbed by the views expressed by other academics on the panel that trust does not matter as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance

TL;DR: Douglass C. North as discussed by the authors developed an analytical framework for explaining the ways in which institutions and institutional change affect the performance of economies, both at a given time and over time.
Posted Content

Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic Performance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the role that institutions, defined as the humanly devised constraints that shape human interaction, play in economic performance and how those institutions change and how a model of dynamic institutions explains the differential performance of economies through time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness

TL;DR: In this article, the extent to which economic action is embedded in structures of social relations, in modern industrial society, is examined, and it is argued that reformist economists who attempt to bring social structure back in do so in the "oversocialized" way criticized by Dennis Wrong.
Book

Foundations of Social Theory

TL;DR: In this article, a new approach to describing both stability and change in social systems by linking the behavior of individuals to organizational behavior is proposed. But the approach is not suitable for large-scale systems.
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