POLI 4067 The Politics of Asia, Spring 2016 東亞政治东亚政治동아시아정치東アジア政治 East Asian Politics

Similar documents
Comparative Politics of East Asia

Comparative Politics of East Asia

POLI 4067 The Politics of Asia, Spring 2018 東亞政治东亚政治동아시아정치東アジア政治. East Asian Politics

Politics of Socio-Economic Development

The Politics of Socio-Economic Development

The Politics of Development in Capitalist Democracy

Politics of Socio-Economic Development

The Politics of Development in Capitalist Democracy

Globalization & Politics

AAAS 380L. DEMOCRACY IN EAST ASIA Binghamton University, Fall 2010

Poli Sci Junior Seminar American Foreign Policy toward Asia

INTL 4360: East Asian Political Systems *

Varieties of Capitalism in East Asia: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and China

POL 305 Introduction to Global/Comparative Politics Course Description Course Goals and Objectives Course Requirements

NOTE: This FYS counts towards an Economics major, but students must still take ECON 001 to qualify for further work in the Economics Department.

Korean Society. Summer 2019

SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS FUDAN UNIVERSITY. Political Development in Modern China (Chinese Politics) Fall 2010

Varieties of Capitalism in East Asia: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and China

Politics 377. Rise of Asia: Political Economy of Development. Spring 2015

Comparative East Asian Studies

Boston University Problems and Issues of Post-Mao China. Semester II /2007 CLA IR 585/ PO 558 Tuesday, Thursday: 2:00-3:30 CAS 314

College of Charleston POLITICAL SCIENCE 323 POLITICS OF EAST ASIA

COLGATE UNIVERSITY. POSC 153A: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS (Spring 2017)

GOVT 238 East Asian International Relations Spring 2010 MWF 9:00-9:50am Kirby 204

Jan 19 April 13 (No Class on March 2) Evaluation is based on class participation (30%), midterm and final exams (30% and 40% respectively).

Other assigned readings will be available on Blackboard.

HUMANITIES 2590 The Making of the Modern World: Renaissance to the Present

MODERNIZATION IN EAST ASIA CHINA AND TAIWAN COMPARED

Local Governance and Grassroots Politics in China

History/EA 255: East Asian Civilization

University of Toronto Department of Political Science

Social Movements, Contentious Politics, and Democracy

SUMMER NOTE: Repeated class absences will affect your participation grade. Please let me know if you are missing class for a valid reason.

Comparative Political Systems (GOVT_ 040) July 6 th -Aug. 7 th, 2015

Korean Development. Grading: Mid-term (40%), final (40%), and participation (20%)

Course Prerequisite: PSC 1001, Introduction to Comparative Politics, is a prerequisite for this class.

IR061 East Asian International Relations TR 2:35-3:50pm Maginnes Hall 260 Department of International Relations Lehigh University

Northeast Asian Politics: Security and Cooperation RPOS 204 (9194)

Economics 5430/6430 Asian Economic History and Development Spring 2015, Thursday 6-9pm Praopan Pratoomchat,

SOSC The World of Politics

Boston University Problems and Issues of Post-Mao China. Semester II /2015 CAS IR 585/ PO 549 Tuesday, Thursday: 2:00-3:15 IRB 102

Overview of Korean Law. John Ohnesorge University of Wisconsin Law School February 2, 2004

WONIK KIM Curriculum Vitae. 240 Stubbs Hall Phone: (225) Department of Political Science Fax: (225)

Political Science 210 Peasants and Collective Action Kevin J. O Brien

NOTE: This course counts towards an Economics major, but students must still take ECON 001 to qualify for further work in the Economics Department.

SEMINARIO EAST ASIAN DEVELOPMENT ECON 3702 SOON- OK SHIN JAMIE

Authoritarian Regimes Political Science 4060

BOSTON COLLEGE EC 374: Economic Reform in China and Latin America

POLS 260: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Department of Political Science Northern Illinois University Tuesday & Thursday 11-12:15 pm DU 461

Armstrong (2007), Pirie (2009) Goodwin (2001), Scott (1976), Popkin (1979) (1979) Amsden (1989), Pirie (2009)

AS/EC 240 A: East Asian Economic History and Development

Office hours: Wednesdays and Thursdays 10:00-11:30 and by appointment 226 Bay State Road, Room 209, tel

International Political Economy: Theories, Approaches and Debates

CIEE in Beijing, China

BROWN UNIVERSITY SPRING 2010 BROWN UNIVERSITY POLS 1821O POLITICS AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN ASIA. Wilson pm

This Syllabus cannot be copied without the express consent of the Instructor. Comparative Politics: Theory & Practice CPO 3010 Fall 2014

TOWARDS A PACIFIC CENTURY

Government Government and Politics of Asia (Draft) M, W 10:30 11:45 AM Office hours: TBA

GVPT 289J: Uncertain Partners: The United States and China in a changing world Fall 2014 M/W 9-9:50 AM SHM 2102 (Discussion sections on Fridays)

21H.504 East Asia in the World Spring 2003

PSC 558: Comparative Parties and Elections Spring 2010 Mondays 2-4:40pm Harkness 329

Politics of East Asia

ECON 5060/6060 History of Economic Doctrines

BANARAS HINDU UNIVERSITY CENTRE FOR THE STUDY OF NEPAL FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES VARANASI

Political Science 261/261W Latin American Politics Wednesday 2:00-4:40 Harkness Hall 210

Introduction to International Relations

POLI 4062 Comparative Political Economy The Political Socio-Economics of States, Markets, and Societies Fall 2008, Monday, 4:40 7:30 pm at 241 Lockett

Late Industrialization and Social Change: South Korea in A Comparative Perspective

Political Science 563 Government and Politics of the People s Republic of China State University of New York at Albany Fall 2014

LSE-PKU Summer School 2018

IPS 225: Japanese Politics and Political Economy

Labor and Globalization (PSC )

In addition, there are a number of articles that must be read for this class. They will be on the Blackboard website.

CHINA IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE

University of International Business and Economics International Summer Sessions. PSC 130: Introduction to Comparative Politics

Course Title Course Code Recommended Credits Suggested Cross Listings Language of Instruction: Prerequisites/Requirements Description Objectives

Introduction to International Relations

SYLLABUS. Departmental Syllabus. Modern Asia HIST Departmental Syllabus. Departmental Syllabus. Departmental Syllabus. None

Course Schedule Spring 2009

FALL 2017 Culture and Context of Korea Tue/Thu: 3:30-4:45PM 5 Washington Place #101. Office Hour: 1-3 PM on Thursdays or by Appointments

International Political Economy

Frances McCall Rosenbluth. Yale University Hamden, CT New Haven, CT

CHAPTER 34 - EAST ASIA: THE RECENT DECADES

Factors in China-Korea Relations: A Survey of College Students in China and Korea Yoon Sung Hong Shaoshi Zou Sang Hyun Park Rujun Yan Abstract

COURSE DESCRIPTION Comparative Law. Description

POL2101 INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL SCIENCE. Spring

The 2nd Sino-Japanese War. March 10, 2015

David B.H. Denoon. Office: New York University Phone: Broadway New York, N.Y FAX:

Comparative Government and Politics POLS 568 Section 001/# Spring 2016

Political Science : International Relations of East Asia (CRN: 24298) The George Washington University Spring 2013 (Tues and Thurs 11:10-12:25)

History 001 Spring 2019 MAKING OF A MODERN WORLD [PROVISIONAL SYLLABUS SUBJECT TO CHANGE]

BA International Studies Leiden University Year Two Semester Two

The World in the Twentieth Century Fall 2018 History 217 Section 03

The Other Cold War. The Origins of the Cold War in East Asia

WWS 300 DEMOCRACY. Spring Robertson Hall 428 Robertson Hall Ph: Ph:

POLI 111: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

POL 421 Theories of Democratic Transition Spring 2010

COMPARATIVE MAFIA: The political economy and sociology of protection-producing enterprises Spring 2008

POLS 435 International Political Economy. Prof. Layna Mosley Department of Political Science University of Notre Dame Fall 2003

United States History from 1865 History Spring 2015 MW 2:00-3:20 PM Wooten Hall 122 University of North Texas

Transcription:

POLI 4067 The Politics of Asia, Spring 2016 東亞政治东亚政治동아시아정치東アジア政治 East Asian Politics Tuesday and Thursday 10:30 11:50 am, 241 Lockett Hall Prof. Wonik Kim, wkim@lsu.edu Office: 229 Stubbs Hall Office Hours: 12:20 1:20 pm on Tuesday and Thursday or by appointment Men make their own history, but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from the past. The tradition of all the dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living. Karl Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte (1852) This course provides an analytical overview of the comparative politics of East Asia, mainly focusing on Northeast Asia (China, Taiwan, Korea, and Japan) with some emphasis on Southeast Asia. This course has at least three goals: 1) to understand important political issues, political institutions, political behaviors, contentious politics, and political economies of East Asia, 2) to provide a theoretical framework to understand important historical events that have shaped the current politics of East Asia, and 3) to overcome an ethnocentric provincialism by making explicit and implicit comparisons (e.g., China and Korean and Japan; East Asia and Euro-America). To do so, this course is divided into three parts. In Part I, we will begin with a session that equips students with a theoretical framework of comparative politics and introduces this region more generally. By focusing on the modern capitalnation-state formation in the context of colonialism and imperialism, the following sessions in Part I will provide significant historical facts and issues of China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, and Southeast Asian countries to properly understand the substantive topics in the following parts. The first part in Part II will deal with political regimes (democracies and dictatorships), social movements, regime dynamics, and the relationships between cultures and democracies in East Asia. In the second part of Part II, we will study two divergent political systems: parliamentary democracy in Japan and communist dictatorship in China. Here the topics are political institutions (political party systems, parliamentarism and presidentialism, electoral systems, Leninist party-state) and political changes (elections, selections, and successions). In Part III, we will examine the political economy of East Asia, highlighting East Asia s phenomenal economic growth, globalization, and the financial crises that have transformed the nature of the East Asian accumulation strategies. We will explore the various conditions under which the economic miracles happened and the socio-political consequences of rapid growth. We will also investigate the economic crises that have ended the miracles. Finally, we will evaluate the rise of China and the re-emergence of East Asia from a long historical perspective, and we will ruminate over what these phenomena mean to the global politics that have been dominated by the West for centuries. 1

SCHEDULE/OUTLINE OF TOPICS 1-2 Jan 14-19 Introduction and Analytical Framework I. MODERN CAPITAL-NATION-STATE FORMATION 2-3 Jan 21-26 The Emergence of Modern East Asia: A Bird s Eye View 3-4 Jan/Feb 28-2-4 China and Taiwan 5 Feb 9 Mardi Gras Holiday No class meeting 11-16- 5-6 Feb 18 Korea and Japan II. POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS, CULTURES, AND PEOPLE 7 Feb 23 Democracies and Dictatorships 7-8 Feb/Mar 25-1 Democratic Transitions 8 Mar 3 Midterm Examination, 10:30 11:50 am 9 Mar 8-10 Cultures and Democracies: Asian Values? 10 Mar 15-17 Hegemonic Party and the Politics of Complacency: Japan 11 Mar 22-24 Spring Break No class meeting 12 Mar 29 Conference No class meeting 12-3 Mar/Apr 31-5 Politico-Economic Machine and Its Sustainability: China III. POLITICAL ECONOMY: MIRACLES AND CRISES 13-4 Apr 7-12 The Developmental State 14-5 Apr 14-19 The Rise (?) of China and the Reorientation of the World 15 Apr 21 Futures Past of East Asia: A Tentative Conclusion 2

READINGS Each student is expected to read (before class) all the required readings for each session (see the reading assignments below). All of these readings are posted on Moodle. All students should have a LSU e-mail account for access to Moodle. Students need to purchase and read the following book to write a final paper (see the course requirements below). Studwell, Joe. 2014. How Asia Works. Grove Press. Recommended/background books: If you are serious about studying East Asia, read these three monumental books on the history of political thoughts: Feng Yulan s A History of Chinese Philosophy [ 中國哲學史 ], Masao Maruyama s Studies in the Intellectual History of Tokugawa Japan [ 日本政治思相史硏究 ], and Joseph Needham s Science and Civilization in China (esp. Volume 2). For an important intellectual history on the formation of Asia in the 20 th century, see Pankaj Mishra s From the Ruins of Empire: The Revolt against the West and the Remaking of Asia (2012), Picador. East Asia and Southeast Asia in general Warren Cohen, East Asia at the Center: Four Thousand Years of Engagement with the World (2000), Columbia University Press; Charles Holcombe, A History of East Asia: From the Origins of Civilization to the Twenty-First Century (2010), Cambridge University Press; David Chandler et al., The Emergence of Modern Southeast Asia (2005), University of Hawaii Press; D. R. SarDesai, Southeast Asia: Past and Present (2012), Westview; Mark Borthwick, Pacific Century: The Emergence of Modern Pacific Asia (2007), Westview. China John K. Fairbank and Merle Goldman, China: A New History (2006), Harvard University Press; Jonathan Spence, The Search for Modern China. (1999), Norton; Marc Blecher, China against the Tides (2010), Continuum; Barry Naughton, The Chinese Economy (2007), the MIT Press; Orville Schell and John Delury, Wealth and Power (2013), Random House. Taiwan John Copper, Taiwan: Nation-State or Province? (2012) Westview; Shelley Rigger, Why Taiwan Matters: Small Island, Global Powerhouse (2011), Rowman & Littlefield. Korea Richard Kim, Lost Names (2011), University of California Press; Donald Clark, Korea in World History (2011), AAS; Ki-baik Lee, Korea, Old and New: A History (1990), Harvard University Press; Bruce Cumings, Korea s Place in the Sun: A Modern History (2005), Norton; Don Oberdorfer, The Two Koreas: A Contemporary History (2001), Basic Books; B. R. Myers, The Cleanest Race (2011), Melville House. Japan Haruki Murakami, Underground (2001), Vintage; Ian Buruma, Inventing Japan (2004), Modern Library; Marius Jansen, The Making of Modern Japan (2000), Harvard University Press; Andrew Gordon, A Modern History of Japan (2013), Oxford University Press; John Dower, Embracing Defeat (2000), Norton; W. G. Beasley, Japanese Imperialism 1894-1945 (1991), Oxford University Press. 3

REQUIREMENTS Basically, classes will involve lectures and discussions of the reading material assigned for each session. But, I will introduce and explain some issues and concepts that are not in the readings, so attendance is crucial. This means that a significant amount of material on the examinations will come from class lectures presenting information not discussed directly in the text and other readings. Participation from students is important and will count toward the final grade. At the end of each week, I will distribute a memo (posted on Moodle) that contains important points of my lecture. Students are expected to complete: 1) In-class midterm (25%) The emphasis is on important concepts and competing explanations of various political phenomena. Knowledge of some relevant historical facts is required as well. 2) Take-home final examination (25%) The test will be given in class on the 21 st of April (Thursday). Students will have approximately three days to complete the test and should email the instructor their answers in a word document by 6:00 pm on the 24 th of April (Sunday). The format of the final take-home exam will be explained in class. 3) Critical review paper (25%) You will write a critical review of Studwell s How Asia Works. The text should be no longer than six single-spaced pages. The format and guide of the paper will be discussed in class. You should submit a hard copy due in class on Thursday, the 21 st of April (or anytime before this deadline). 4) Attendance and participation (25%) It is virtually impossible for you to receive a satisfactory grade if you miss several classes. Attendance will be taken for each session. Students may earn credit for their attendance at each class session, while repeated and unexcused absence will cause deduction in student s total grade. In addition to attending class, students are highly encouraged to ask and answer questions, and to make appropriate comments on issues covered in class. GRADING SCALE A+ 100 ~ 97 B+ 89 ~ 87 C+ 79 ~ 77 D+ 69 ~ 67 F 59 ~ 0 A 96 ~ 93 B 86 ~ 83 C 76 ~ 73 D 66 ~ 63 A- 92 ~ 90 B- 82 ~ 80 C- 72 ~ 70 D- 62 ~ 60 IMPORTANT DATES In-class midterm exam: Thursday, March 3 10:30 11:50 am Take-home final exam: Sunday, April 24 6:00 pm via email Final paper Thursday, April 21 In class (or before) Mardi Gras Holiday Tuesday, February 9 No class meeting Spring Break Tue/Thu, March 22/24 No class meeting Conference Tuesday, March 29 No class meeting 4

READING ASSIGNMENTS AND SPECIFIC TOPICS I. MODERN CAPITAL-NATION-STATE FORMATION Week 1-2 (1/14-19) Introduction and Analytical Framework Scope and roadmap of the course. Three research traditions or paradigms: structuralism, culturalism, and rationalism. Analytical framework. Role of theory. Importance of history. Carr, E. H. 1961. What Is History? New York: Random House, The Historian and His Facts, pp. 3-35. Week 2-3 (1/21-26) The Emergence of Modern East Asia: A Bird s Eye View What is unique about East Asia? Asia before Europe. Chinese world order and the tributary system. Anarchical vs. hierarchical international systems. Biological old regime. Nationalism and the modern-state. Capitalism. Imagined communities. Colonialism and imperialism. Turning point in history. International setting in the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries. Eurocentrism. Global history. Borthwick, Mark. 2007. Pacific Century: The Emergence of Modern Pacific Asia. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, pp. 1-8, 21. Holcombe, Charles. 2010. A History of East Asia. New York: Cambridge University Pressm Introduction: What Is East Asia? pp. 1-10. Anderson, Benedict. 1983. Imagined Communities. New York: Verso, pp. 1-9. Week 3-4 (1/28-2/02-04) China and Taiwan Romanization. Approaches: modernization and impact-response frameworks. Paradox of growth without development. Three motifs in the 19 th century. Xinhai 1911 Revolution. Rise of the CCP. Colonizers and colonized. The Chinese Revolution of 1949. KMT (or the GMD). February 28 Incident. Why did the Nationalists fail? National identity. Introduction to Modern Chinese History. East Asian Curriculum Project of Columbia University. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ Taiwan and US-China Relations. East Asian Curriculum Project of Columbia University. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ Cohen, Paul. 1996. Moving Beyond Tradition and Modernity, in Discovering History in China. New York: Columbia University Press, Chapter 2, pp. 57-96. Fairbank, John and Merle Goldman. 2002. China: A New History. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, pp. 331-341. Week 5 (2/09) Mardi Gras Holiday No class meeting. 5

Week 5-6 (2/11-16-18) Japan and Korea Tokugawa regime. Sankin-kotai. Meiji Ishin. Oligarchs. Taisho Democracy. Rationalist explanation. Imperialism in the 1880s. Expansionism and militarism. Zaibatsu. Choson (or Joseon) dynasty and the issue of historical continuity. Decolonization period and the Korean War. How was Korea divided? The world in 1945. Juche and the nature of the North Korean state. Nuclear crises. Who rules North Korea? Japanese Modern History. East Asian Curriculum Project of Columbia University. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ Ramseyer, J. Mark and Frances Rosenbluth. 1998. The Politics of Oligarchy: Institutional Choice in Imperial Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1-28. Korea in East Asian and World History, Korea: 1945-present. East Asian Curriculum Project of Columbia University. http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/ II. POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS, CULTURES, AND PEOPLE Week 7 (2/23) Democracies and Dictatorships Minimalist vs. maximalist definitions. Miracle of democracy. Fragility of democracy. Importance of compromise. Trend and pattern of political regimes throughout the world. Waves of democratization in East Asia. Freedom House. Methodology. Freedom in the World. http://www.freedomhouse.org Przeworski, Adam et al. 2000. Democracy and Development: Political Regimes and Material Well-Being in the World, 1950-1990. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 13-36. Week 7-8 (2/25-3/01) Democratic Transitions Modernization theory. Prerequisites vs. strategic interactions. Top-down vs. bottom-up processes. Movement politics vs. party politics. Crisis-driven vs. non-crisis transitions. Internal vs. external factors. South Korea s experience. Tiananmen Square in 1989. Compromise revisited. Why do some dictators survive longer than others? Nathan, Andrew and Perry Link. 2001. [Zhang Liang, compiler] The Tiananmen Papers. New York: Public Affairs. Excerpts. Week 8 (3/03) Midterm Examination 10:30 11:50 am Week 9 (3/08-10) Culture and Democracy: Asian Values? Conceptualization of political culture. Intersubjectivity. Asian values. Do we need democrats to have a democracy? Strongly culturalist vs. weakly culturalist vs. non-culturalist arguments. Culture as religion. Culture as the distribution of dispositions within society. Culture as an epiphenomenon. Is culture an independent or dependent variable? Is culture a variable? Lee Kuan Yew. 1994. Culture is Destiny. Foreign Affairs vol. 73 n. 2 (March/April), pp. 109-26. 6

Inglehart, Ronald. 2000. Culture and Democracy. In Lawrence Harrison and Samuel Huntington (eds.) Culture Matters, pp. 80-97. Przeworski, Adam. 1998. Culture and Democracy. World Culture Report. Paris: UNESCO Publishing, pp. 125-131, 134-146. Week 10 (3/15-17) The Hegemonic Party and the Politics of Complacency : Japan US occupation as a reverse course. Parliamentarism vs. presidentialism. The 1955 system. Cabinet formation. Minimal coalition vs. minimal connected coalition. What made the end of the LDP dominance possible? Lost twenty years. Faction politics. Empire strikes back. Politics of complacency? Pivotal elections 1946, 1993, 2009, and 2012. The issues to be discussed are: 1) party system, 2) parliamentarism, 3) electoral system, 4) cabinet formation, and 5) political ideology deep-rooted conservatism. Curtis, Gerald. 1999. The Logic of Japanese Politics. New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 26-64. Rosenbluth, Frances, and Michael Thies. 2010. Japan Transformed. Princeton: Princeton University Press, Epilogue, pp. 186-192. Week 11 (3/22-24) Spring Break No class meeting. Week 12 (3/29) Conference No class meeting. Week 12-13 (3/31-4/05) The Politico-Economic Machine and Its Sustainability: China Cultural Revolution. Collectivization and de-collectivization. Deng s reforms. Socialism with Chinese characteristics. Lost hundred years. Leninist party-state. PBSC imperium in imperio. Selection vs. succession. Fifth generation of leadership. Factions parties within the party. Corruption and pollution. The issues are: 1) communist state apparatuses, 2) power succession process, and 3) prospects for democratization will China become a democracy? Wang, James. 2002. 7 th Edition. Contemporary Chinese Politics: An Introduction. New Jersey: Prentice Hall. Chapter 4, pp.69-104. McGrecor, Richard. 2010. The Party. New York: HarperCollins, pp. 1-33. Ho, Wing-Chung. 2012. The Rise of the Bureaucratic Bourgeoisie and Factional Politics of China. Journal of Contemporary Asia 42(3): 514-521. III. POLITICAL ECONOMY: MIRACLES AND CRISES Week 13-14 (4/07-12) The Developmental State Historical trend of economic growth throughout the world. Diminishing return. Import substitution vs. export orientation. Embedded autonomy. Keiratsu and Chaebol. The MITI and EPB. Is the Asian miracle a miracle? Origins and the demise of the developmental state. Efficiency or collusion? Who guards the guardians? Can the East Asia s success be emulated in other countries? 7

Krugman, Paul. 1994. The Myth of Asia s Miracle: A Cautionary Fable. Foreign Affairs (November/December): 62-78. Evans, Peter. 1989. Predatory, Developmental, and Other Apparatuses: A Comparative Political Economy Perspective on the Third World State. Sociological Forum. 4(1): 561-587. Doner, Richard et al. 2005. Systemic Vulnerability and the Origins of Development States: Northeast and Southeast Asia in Comparative Perspective. International Organization 59(2): 327-361. Week 14-15 (4/14-19) The Rise (?) of China and the Reorientation of the World Deng s economic reforms. Developmental state vs. quanxi capitalism. Socialism with Chinese characteristics revisited. Socialist legacies. Dual track. Township and village enterprises (TVEs). State-owned enterprises (SOEs). Foreign direct investment (FDI). The rise of East Asia again. Shortterm view vs. long-term view. Bardhan, Pranab. 2010. Awakening Giants, Feet of Clay: Assessing the Economic Rise of China and India. Princeton: Princeton University Press, Introduction and Chapter 2, pp. 1-39. Arrighi, Giovanni, Po-Keung Hui, Ho-fung Hung, and Mark Sheldon. 2003. Historical Capitalism, East and West. In The Resurgence of East Asia: 500, 150, and 50 Year Perspective, edited by Giovanni Arrighi, Takeshi Hamashita, and Mark Sheldon. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 259-333. Week 15 (4/21) Futures Past of East Asia: A Tentative Conclusion Asian financial crisis of 1997 and the end of the developmental state. Neoliberal globalization. Geopolitics within global economy. G-2? Prospects for an East Asian community? Role of history revisited. Conception of modernity revisited. What are the implications of East Asia s rise for global politics? How can we make sense that the center of the world, for the first time in modern world history, is moving to a non-western country: East Asia? Kissinger, Henry. 2011. On China. New York: Penguin Books, pp. 514-548. The Economist. Special Report: Business in Asia. May 31 st 2014. Final paper due in class on the 21 st of April (Thursday). Final take-home exam is given in class on the 21 st of April (Thursday). The deadline of the exam is 6:00 pm on the 24 th of April (Sunday) via an email attachment. 8