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Modernization theory

About: Modernization theory is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 14641 publications have been published within this topic receiving 232469 citations.


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Book
01 Jan 1980
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper discussed the origins and rise of the Chinese Communist Movement, from military Communism to Deng's reforms, and the erosion of Chinese Communist Ideology.
Abstract: *Romanization of Chinese Names of Persons and Places*Introduction: Historical and Cultural Perspectives*The Origin and Rise of the Chinese Communist Movement*From Military Communism to Deng's Reforms*The Erosion of Chinese Communist Ideology: Marxism-Leninism, Mao's Thought, Dengism, and the Thinking of Jiang Zemin*Political Institutions of the Party-State: Structural Issues and the Policy Process*Elites and the Cadre System: Leadership Style, Factionalism, Succession, and Recruitment*Reform for a Creditable Socialist Legal System*Provincial and Local Politics: Centralism versus Regionalism, National Minorities, and the Case of Tibet*Greater South China: Reversion of Hong Kong and Macao, and the Pearl River Delta Regional Development*The Military's Role in Chinese Politics*Democracy, Dissent, and the Tiananmen Mass Movement*The Politics of Modernization: Rural and Urban Economic Reforms*The Politics of Modernization: Education, Science and Technology, the Open Door Policy, and the Intellectuals*Appendix A: The Constitution of the People's Republic of China (1982)*Appendix B: The Constitution of the Communist Party of China (1982)*Appendix B-1: Revision of Some Articles of the Constitution of the Communist Party of China (1987)*Appendix B-2: Amendment to the CCP Constitution (September 1997)*Index

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of recent developments in the public sector, focusing on government attempts to involve the private sector and its continuing reforms of pay determination arrangements, is presented in this paper, highlighting the tensions that this programme of reform aroused as the government struggled to respond to recruitment and retention problems and widespread perceptions of public-sector ‘crisis.
Abstract: The year 2001 in the UK was dominated by the difficulties the Labour government confronted in developing a coherent programme of public-sector modernization. This review examines recent developments in the public sector, focusing on government attempts to involve the private sector and its continuing reforms of pay determination arrangements. It highlights the tensions that this programme of reform aroused as the government struggled to respond to recruitment and retention problems and widespread perceptions of public-sector ‘crisis’.

60 citations

Book
04 Dec 2012
TL;DR: The Circle of Justice as discussed by the authors is a circle of justice and good government in the Middle East, where the strong might not oppress the weak, while the weak might not oppose the strong.
Abstract: 1. Introduction: The Circle of Justice 2. Mesopotamia: "That the Strong Might Not Oppress the Weak" 3. Persia: "The Deeds God Likes Best are Righteousness and Justice" 4. The Islamic Empire: "No Prosperity without Justice and Good Administration" 5. Politics in Transition: "Curb the Strong from Riding on the Weak" 6. The Turks and Islamic Civilization: "The Most Penetrating of Arrows is the Prayer of the Oppressed" 7. Mongols and Turks: "Fierce toward Offenders, and in Judgements Just" 8. Early Modern Empires: "The World is a Garden, Its Wall is the State" 9. Modernization and Revolution: "No Justice without Law Applied Equally to All" 10. The Middle East in the Twentieth Century: "A Regime Can Endure with Impiety but not with Injustice". Epilogue

60 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The relationship between the state and women in Republican Turkey has changed substantively since the early decades of the Republic of Turkey as mentioned in this paper, and women have developed a language with which they can now redefine their relationship to the state as individual women.
Abstract: "Even though women have not altered the fundamental understandings of secularism and nationalism in the country, they have exposed the limitations of these concepts. Women have developed a language with which they can now redefine their relationship to the state as individual women ..." The relationship between the state and women in Republican Turkey has changed substantively since the early decades of the Republic. It has been argued that women in Turkey were "emancipated but unliberated"(1) in the aftermath of the reforms initiated by the founding fathers of the Republic.(2) While women were given civil and political rights equal to men in the 1920s and 1930s, they remained confined by communal norms and customs. By the 1980s and thereafter, defiant daughters of the older generation demanded liberation: they sought autonomy from tradition and the right to speak up as individuals. Their calls for liberation took many shapes and helped liberate the public realm from the yoke of the state. After the establishment of the Republic, the founding fathers set out to modernize Turkey and to raise traditional society to the "level it deserved in the civilized world."(3) I. Sunar states that the process of modernization led to the "monopolization of the public domain by the regime ... and a fusion of the official and public domains."(4) As the modernization process bore fruit and the country became more integrated with the Western world, different types of women contested this monopoly. The reformist, albeit still dominating, state enabled women to become educated and enlightened, and in turn, to challenge the boundaries that the state had drawn. Women's demands allowed for the emergence of a new public space where the traditional bifurcation of private and public realms had to be redefined. Western institutions, values and norms were adopted, transformed and at times rejected as women became emancipated and later demanded to be liberated. This paper introduces the historical context of women's emancipation in the Republic of Turkey and then discusses how different women's groups expanded, transformed or perpetuated the parameters of the public realm with their different, at times seemingly contradictory, discourses for liberation. The focus of this article is on issues and concerns around which women voiced their differences from the founding fathers who "emancipated women," and not on politics in formal political institutions, such as political parties or parliament. THE CONTEXT OF WOMEN'S EMANCIPATION Turkey's movement toward modernity, which brought with it the emancipation of women, was different from modernization in other developing countries. Partha Chatterjee argues that in post-colonial nation-states, a national community is created to be different from that which is traditional, as well as unique from that which is Western.(5) The "traditional" is selectively adapted and transformed to be modern, but not Western. In the Turkish case, however, the founding fathers of the Republic sought to become Western as well as modern. Furthermore, the founding fathers exhibited creativity in "imagining" the national state by rejecting Islam, the traditional religion of the majority, and seeking to legitimize their project with a reference to the pre-Islamic Turkish past. This period was idealized, if not invented, to legitimize the 'Western values of secularism, equality and nationalism that the Turkish project of modernity sought to adopt. The modernity project was unique and indigenous, not because it revolted against the cultural hegemony of the West, but rather because it claimed that those Western values were actually Turkish. This was done, furthermore, in the context of a predominantly Islamic society. Women were crucial in this claim and in the reinvention of the national culture.(6) The Turkish intellectual Ziya Gokalp, who provided the ideological underpinnings of Turkish reforms following the founding of the Republic in 1923, argued that women had been considered equal to men among the pre-Islamic Turks in Central Asia, unlike during the Islamic-Ottoman period. …

60 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20231,630
20223,824
2021370
2020573
2019604