INTRODUCTION
dissatisfaction, unrest and conflict, and so it is no wonder that China’s authoritarian Party-State places political and social stability, alongside the market-led economy, as its main priorities in seeking to establish and maintain an “harmonious society”. Human-rights abuses continue, despite and sometimes because of international pressure. In 2008, many ordinary Chinese citizens (overseas and in China itself) demonstrated across the world against what they regarded as international interference in Chinese affairs, and China-bashing. Most threatening to the very fabric of the Party-State is the rampant corruption. The attempt to bring corruption under control is one of a number of reforms to the political system. Another example is the introduction of participatory, if not democratic, practices at the grassroots and basic levels of government. Reforming the Chinese Communist Party to grant more influence to the membership is also on the agenda. Whether the pace of these reforms is enough to meet the challenges to social justice is an open question. Economic power grants China considerable leverage in international relations, but it can also be problematic. The big if-and-when question within the region and the wider international system is whether there will be a struggle for dominance between the USA and China – and whether that will play out through economics and trade or some more deadly means. The current atmosphere of perpetual war, since the war on terror was declared in 2001, is frightening and would be more so if China too were pulled into the morass. The status of Taiwan and its mainland liaison activities is a constant source of concern, especially for those who see Taiwan’s democracy as a boon in the region. Meanwhile, statisticians and demographers in China collect large volumes of statistical information, through which they might measure the inequities across provincial and regional boundaries, and with which social scientists can interpret the state of China on the ground. It may be unfashionable but perhaps these public servants are more heroic, and certainly more functional, in determining what needs to be done in China now, and for whom. As we point out in Part Seven of this book, there are no perfect statistics, and even the collection of data is subject to political controls, both in China and worldwide. Statistics alone do not explain why one city will thrive under WTO regulations, whilst another will ignore them because they threaten local political elites, or because local businesses need local subsidy to survive and protect employment. One city will put resources and imagination into branding itself in the international imagination, whilst another will miss (or deliberately ignore) the point of tourism and “destination management”. There are maps in this book, then, in which to give a truly accurate picture of the state of China, we would need to provide detailed regional specifications, county- and township-level case studies, and a lot of historical background. Where we cannot give this detail we have suggested readings from works of current China specialists, in economy, culture, the social sciences and political history, and we really hope that readers are inspired to follow up these suggestions. There are many resources on the internet, the best of which we have tried to include in the commentaries at the back of this book. Financial pages of national newspapers are also good sources for seeing certain aspects of new China unfold before our eyes. Every deal, every bankruptcy, every corporate decision will affect someone, possibly many thousands of people, in contemporary China and beyond. As with all books, but especially one such as this, which requires a range of knowledge and expertise, the authors are indebted to the wisdom of others. The support (in time and space) from the Asian Studies and Chinese Departments
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and Media and Communications Department at the University of Sydney, and a fellowship at the Department of Film at Kings College London have been invaluable. The ongoing work of colleagues in Australia and overseas: Mayfair Mei-hui Yang, Ying Zhu, David SG Goodman, Harriet Evans, Michael Keane, Luigi Tomba, David Kelly, Louise Edwards, Elaine Jeffreys, is always inspirational. We also thank the Australian Research Council for its support for the Middle Class Taste project (with Zheng Yi), which has informed the arguments of this book. We are grateful to Marc Blecher, Cynthia Enloe and Professor Hua Qingzhao, who engaged us about particular approaches taken in the atlas. The resulting interpretations are those of the authors. Sarah Cook, Rosemary Foot, Jude Howell, Jie Dao, Leicia Petersen, Peng Zou, Tina Schilbach, Ming Liang, Norman Stockman, Paul Wingrove and the truly wonderful Philippa Kelly, have made important contributions to the atlas and provided much-needed advice and encouragement for the whole project, while the University of Sussex was more than generous with the provision of facilities. We are pleased to have been able to select photographs for pages 24, 34, 62, 74 and 88 from Beijing-based photographer Ben McMillan. In addition, we are grateful to the following for permission to reproduce their photographs: 12 and 20 Christopher Herwig; 22 (top) John Sigler/iStockphoto; 22 (bottom) Adrian H Hearn; 23 (top) Adrian Beesley/iStockphoto; 22 (bottom) Anthony Brown/iStockphoto; 22 (right) Matthew Spriggs; 52 Mark Henley / Panos Pictures; 104 DSG Goodman. This atlas is a collective project, and our co-workers at Myriad Editions, Candida Lacey, Corinne Pearlman, Isabelle Lewis and, most of all, Jannet King deserve to have their names on the cover and title page with us. We thank them with great affection. Memories of Anne Benewick (1937–1998), the co-founder of Myriad, inspired us. China held a special place among the Myriad Atlases, for China was special for Anne. When in Beijing she played a mean game of table tennis, to the surprise and delight of her opponents and on-lookers. At the People’s University she made jiaozis with faculty and students, cycled on her second-hand Flying Pigeon and searched relentlessly for the perfect peony. Robert Benewick Brighton, UK
Stephanie Hemelryk Donald Sydney, Australia and London, UK
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Trade between China and Africa increased 67% in the first half of 2008.
Part One CHINA IN THE WORLD
China’s remarkable economic performance catapulted the country on to the world stage in the late 1990s and has continued to support the country’s claim for world status ever since. In the first half of 2008, the year of the infamous “credit crunch”, China was responsible for one-third of global GDP growth, and despite a previous high of 12 percent growth per annum, even a global