Asia and China in the Global Era

Adrian J. Bailey (Editor), King Sang Mak (Editor)

    Research output: Book/ReportBook or reportpeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    China's strong economic growth occurring alongside modernization across the great majority of Asian societies has created what many see as a transnational space through and by which not only economic, social and cultural resources, but also threats and crises flow over traditional political boundaries. The first section of the work lays out a clear conceptual framework. It draws on arguments about nation no longer being the only container of society, about trans-disciplinary thinking, and about knowledge being context-bound. It identifies and discusses distinctive features of China and Asia in the global era. These include population, urbanization and climate change; the continuing reach of Orientalist shadows; cultural politics of knowledge. It closes by arguing how global studies adds value to existing accounts. The second, and longer, section applies this framework through a series of original empirical case-studies in three areas: migration/poverty/gender; culture/education; well-being.

    Both the conceptual framework and case-studies are drawn from research presented at HKBU since 2011 under the auspices of the Global Social Sciences Conference Series and supplemented by additional papers.

    Addressing two-way relationships between social, cultural, political, and security transformations across Chinese and Asian societies and global factors;

    Examining the circulation of resources and social issues in Asia.
    Original languageEnglish
    PublisherDe Gruyter Mouton
    Number of pages236
    ISBN (Electronic)9781501505591
    ISBN (Print)9781501514890
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 18 Jan 2021

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