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Commodifying Communism: Business, Trust, And Politics In A Chinese City (Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences)

Commodifying Communism: Business, Trust, And Politics In A Chinese City (Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences)

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David L. Wank
Cambridge University Press
Edition: New Ed, 9/6/2001
EAN 9780521798419, ISBN10: 0521798418

Paperback, 314 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm
Language: English

Commodifying Communism is an ethnographically grounded account of the institutional organization and political consequences of China's historically unprecedented market growth. Drawing upon almost two years of ethnographic fieldwork, this book challenges conventional views of post-communist emerging markets being tied to the retreat of the state. David Wank shows how entrepreneurs running private trading companies in Xiamen City, Fujian Province (one of China's five special economic zones) maximize profit and security through patron-client networks with local state agents. The book examines how processes of opportunity, exchange, expectations, and advantage are constrained by both statist and popular institutions in market clientelism. It also considers the implications of market clientelism for the dynamism of China's emerging market economy relative to Eastern European post-communist economies and its political consequences for state-society and center-local relations.

Introduction
1. Orientation of the study
2. Institutional commodification
concepts and categories of analysts
Part I. Instituted Processes of Commercial Clientelism
3. The structure of commercial opportunity of Xiamen
4. Symbiotic transactions between private firms and public units
5. Enhancing expectations
the social organization of contracts
6. Entrepreneurial paths and capital
personal attributes as competitive advantage
Part II. Economic and Political Outcomes
7. Comparing economic performance in China and Eastern Europe
8. The transformation of political order
9. Epilogue
evolutionary trends in the 1990s.