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Full Description
This book is about the practice of rural development in contemporary China. It evolves the concept of 'neo-exogenous development' to explain how the power of the state links to community action via local party structures, in pursuit of both state-building and rural revitalisation.
Through case studies, the book examines how central government investments are channelled through area-based programmes, which are then locally implemented by party-state and community actors. It illustrates significant continuity in China's rural development, from the Imperial era, through the Maoist Collectivization Movement, and onwards to the Open Reform and current National Rural Revitalization Strategy. Advancing Rural Development in China re-evaluates the theory and practice of rural development, identifying important lessons for other nations.
The book presents a critical study of China's approach to rural development for students and researchers in the fields of human geography, rural sociology, planning, agricultural economics, public management, and international development.
Contents
1. Introduction — Advancing Rural Development 2. Chinese Rural Development in International Context 3. Government, Governance, and Marginalization in Rural China 4. Rural Development and Integration — Evolving State-Community Relations in China 5. Rural Revitalization and Neo-Exogenous Development 6. The Village Cases and Research Approach 7. The Binding Village: Lanjing and Its Evolving Bamboo Industry 8. The Striving Village: Qianjiachi and Its Orange MAZ 9. The Receiving Village: Yangmatang's Fruit Industry 10. Neo-Exogenous Development: Advancing Development or Projecting Power? 11. State and Community in Rural China



