Gilles Guiheux
Ning Wang, Making a Market Economy; Yan Sun, Corruption and Market in Contemporary China
White-Collar Migrants in Coastal Chinese Cities
Entrepreneurs of Their Professional Careers
Carolyn L. Hsu, Creating Market Socialism: How ordinary People Are Shaping Class and Status in China
Jie Chen and Bruce J. Dickson, Allies of the State: China’s Private Entrepreneurs and Democratic Change
Editorial
Joseph A. Camilleri, The Political Economy the Asia-Pacific Region — States, Markets and Civil Society in Asia Pacific
Isabelle Thireau et Wang Hangsheng éds, Disputes au village chinois. Formes du juste et recompositions locales des espaces normatifs
Isabelle Thireau and Wang Hangsheng eds., Disputes au village chinois. Formes du juste et recompositions locales des espaces normatifs
Julien Berjeaut: Chinois à Calcutta
Chinois à Calcutta, les tigres du Bengale (Chinese in Calcutta, the Bengal Tigers), by Julien Berjeaut
Supachai Panitchpakdi et Mark L. Clifford, China and the WTO, Changing China, Changing World Trade
Supachai Panitchpakdi and Mark L. Clifford, China and the WTO, Changing China, Changing World Trade
Judy Chung Chuihua, Jeffrey Inaba, Rem Koolhaas et Sze Tsung Leong éds., Great Leap Forward
Judy Chung Chuihua, Jeffrey Inaba, Rem Koolhaas & Sze Tsung Leong eds., Great Leap Forward
Le renouveau du capitalisme familialDéfense et illustration par un entrepreneur du Zhejiang
Cet article s'intéresse à un mode d'organisation de l'activité économique de plus en plus courant en Chine : l'entreprise privée familiale. A travers l'itinéraire d'un individu d'une part, et le discours de celui-ci sur l'entreprise et sur l'économie en général d'autre part, notre ambition est d’appréhender le nouvel ordre idéologique et moral en construction. Le recours à une rhétorique à la fois moderniste, socialiste et confucéenne, reflète l'opportunisme de l'auteur et le caractère de bricolage composite des valeurs dans la Chine actuelle.
Le renouveau du capitalisme familial
Pierre Gentelle : Chine et « diaspora »
Jean-Pierre Larivière ed. : La Chine et les Chinois de la diaspora
Pierre Gentelle, Chine et “diaspora” [China and the “diaspora”]
Jean-Pierre Larivière ed., La Chine et les Chinois de la diaspora [China and the Chinese Diaspora]
Sherman Cochran, Encountering Chinese Networks-Western, Japanese and Chinese Corporations in China, 1880-1937
Edmund Terence Gomez et Michael Hsiao Hsin-Huang éds., Chinese Business in South-East Asia. Contesting Cultural Explanations, Researching Entrepreneurship
Edmund Terence Gomez and Michael Hsiao Hsin-Huang eds., Chinese Business in South-East Asia. Contesting Cultural Explanations, Researching Entrepreneurship
La reconversion d’un espace économique urbain dans la province du HunanD’une entreprise d’Etat à un marché spécialisé
S. Sugiyama et Linda Grove éds., Commercial Networks in Modern Asia
La cristallisation inachevée du secteur privé
S. Sugiyama and Linda Grove eds., Commercial Networks in Modern Asia
The Incomplete Crystallisation of the Private Sector
Luigi Tomba éd., East Asian Capitalism. Conflicts, Growth and Crisis
The Transformation of an Urban Economic Area in Hunan ProvinceFrom state enterprise to a specialised market
The Revival of Family Capitalism A Zhejiang entrepreneur
This article looks at an economic organisation more and more frequently seen in China: the private family firm. Through an analysis of the way Mao Lixiang speaks of his career, of family firms and of the Chinese economy in general, the article aims to clarify this new and growing ideological and moral order. The use of a rhetoric at the same time modernist, socialist, Confucian and traditional reflects the opportunism of the man himself and the mixing and matching of values that characterises China today.
The Revival of Family Capitalism
David S. G. Goodman, Class in Contemporary China
François Godement : Dragon de feu, dragon de papier - L'Asie a-t-elle un avenir ? et Jean-Luc Domenach : L'Asie en danger
Joseph A. Camilleri, The Political Economy of the Asia-Pacific Region—States, Markets and Civil Society in Asia Pacific
Adam Segal, Digital Dragon. High-Technology Enterprises in China, et Kellee S. Tsai, Back-Alley Banking, Private entrepreneurs in China
Adam Segal, Digital Dragon. High-Technology Enterprises in China, and Kellee S. Tsai, Back-Alley Banking, Private entrepreneurs in China
Swaran Singh, China- South Asia : Issues, Equations, Policies Gilles Boquérat, Frédéric Grare (éds.), India, China, Russia. Intricacies of an Asian Triangle
A Case of Double Socialisation in the Social Sciences: The Experience of Chinese Researchers Trained in France
ABSTRACT: This article discusses the epistemological issues raised by the internationalisation of the social sciences as they affect the case of students from the People’s Republic of China who are trained in social sciences in France and return to pursue their career in higher education and research in China. The aim is to assess whether the epistemological differences between the two academic worlds may give rise to any professional difficulties in this many-sided scientific socialisation. Although our qualitative enquiry has revealed a number of differences, the problem of the availability of professional opportunities does not seem to have a distinctively epistemological dimension. KEYWORDS: internationalisation, social sciences, Chinese students, France, China, scientific socialisation, epistemology, higher education, research.
Chinese Worker’s Livelihood Strategies: A Zhejiang Case Study in the Garment Industry
ABSTRACT: This article evaluates the possibilities of individual agency in the case of a group of workers employed by a large garment factory in Zhejiang Province. The issue of workers’ ability to exercise power is tested by two sets of facts: workers’ job histories and workers’ household expenses. The author argues that workers’ agency is largely dependent upon gender, age, place of origin, and living arrangements. Workers’ main power is the possibility to quit a job. The overall conclusion is that agency remains limited by the precariousness of workers’ lives from a lifelong perspective. KEYWORDS: China, workers, agency, tactics, strategies, garment industry, livelihood.
 
         
        