Puppet TroopsChinaWe show that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) experienced significantly faster growth in counties occupied by the Japanese Army than those garrisoned by the KuChen, TingKung, James Kai-SingSocial Science Electronic Publishing
The major argument of this book is that Chinese communism represents a “decomposition” of Marxism. This is an interesting point for Schwartz, a non-Marxist, to have made. The CCP did not have the proletarian base that a communist revolution, as prescribed by Marx, was supposed to have. ...
“Confucianization” of China, Rise of theKejuSystem, and the Aftermath China's First Rise as a Superpower (713–1820 AD) Dawn of the Modern Age: Paradox of China's Response to the West The Puzzle of the Rise of Communism: Maoist China in Retrospect ...
Public opinion polls and surveys have helped push economic reforms into being in China. But when the reforms promised weren't delivered, public opinion tur... S Rosen - 《Studies in Comparative Communism》 被引量: 17发表: 1989年 Public Relations Education in the People's Republic of China Pu...
The Communist conquest of China : a history of the civil war, 1945-1949 Dr. B. Schwartz of Harvard University, for example, attaches considerable importance to these articles in his Chinese Communism and the Rise of Mao. It must be noted, however, that these articles as printed in The Sel...
Chinese Communist Party, established in 1921, in the spirit of achieving communism, has always been regarding democracy as basic political value pursuit and has been, during the tide of revolution, continuously searching a way to realize democracy in China. In 1949, Chinese Communist Party ...
Brzezinski, Zbigniew. 1989.The grand failure: the birth and death of communism in the twentieth century. New York: Charles Schribner’s Sons. Google Scholar Chang, Gordon G. 2001.The coming collapse of China. New York: Random House.
the seaboard metropoles of Beijing and Shanghai. And although scholars have pointed to the importance of the many cultural-political societies of the period, they have largely neglected to examine these associations, seeing them only as seedbeds of Chinese communism and its leaders, like Mao ...
” says Fenggang Yang, director of the centre on religion and Chinese society at Purdue University. “Chinese officials often cite the experience of Poland, where they believe the Catholic Church helped destroy communism and, although the two situations are not...