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Full Description
China's emergence as a technology leader has become a major factor in geopolitics, transforming global political and economic relationships. In its bid to achieve digital great power status, China's government has reformed laws and policies, drastically increased investment, and become more assertive internationally. Chinese companies have expanded at home and abroad, but relationships between government and the private sector have sometimes been fractious.
This open access book assesses the extent to which the Chinese government has been able to achieve its ambitious digital goals, and more broadly, how this reflects rapidly changing domestic and international political and economic dynamics surrounding China's rise as a major technology player. This is the first book of its kind, interrogating the complex, dynamic interactions between political, market, and technological factors that structure China's digital development. It will provide information and intellectual frameworks for scholars, policymakers, and professionals to appreciate the complexity of China's digital policy landscape, the process of learning and iteration the Party continues to experience as external events impact the policy process, and the impact China's innovation policies, regulations, and achievements have had, or may have, in the future.
The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Contents
Introduction by Rogier Creemers
Part I: Digital Concepts and Institutions
Chapter 1: The Cyberspace Administration of China: A Portrait by Jamie Horsley and Rogier Creemers
Chapter 2: The Stumbling Smart State: Fragmented Policy Experimentation & Dubious Consolidation by Straton Papagianneas & Adam Knight
Part II: Strategic Emerging Technologies
Chapter 3: China's Industrial Policy for Semiconductors by John Lee
Chapter 4: Fintech in China: Trading off Growth and Risk, Innovation and Control by Martin Chorzempa
Part III: International Engagement and Confrontation
Chapter 5: China: A Technical Standardisation Power? by Tim Rühlig
Chapter 6: China and Global Data Transfers: Implications for Future Rulemaking by Hunter Dorwart
Chapter 7: China and Global Internet Governance: ITU, ICANN and the World Internet Conference by Gianluigi Negro
Chapter 8: Becoming a Cyber Superpower: China Builds Offensive Capability with Military, Government and Private Sector Forces by Mei Danowski
Part IV: Local Dynamics
Chapter 9: China - A Rising Tech Power? National Ambitions and Local Realities by Genia Kostka
Chapter 10: Opening the City Through Debordering IT: The Making of an Innovation Ecosystem in a Post-Industrial Special Economic Zone in China by Yujing Tan
Index
About the Editors and Contributors
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