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Books
Available
Publication year: 2009
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Table of contents
Introduction Xiaowei ZANG, University of Sheffield
General Report: Comprehensive Analytical Report for 2006 on the Stability and “Harmony” of Chinese Society Li Peilin, Chen Guangjin, and Li Wei Government Officials’ Basic Opinions on China’s Social Situations in 2006-2007 Qing Lianbin 2006 Report on China’s Social Psychology Chinese Academy of Social Sciences: Institute of Sociology Wang Junxiu, Yang Yiyin, and Chen Wuxiao 2006 Report on China’s Social Psychology Chinese Academy of Social Sciences: Institute of Sociology Wang Junxiu, Yang Yiyi, and Chen Wuxiao Personal Consumption among Urban and Rural Residents in China in 2006 Lu Qingzhe Present Population Composition and Development Status in China Zhang Yi Employment in China: Current Rural-Urban Development Trends and Projections for the Future Fan Rong and Guo Yue An Analysis of Chinese Social Security in 2006 Shi Hanbing Public Security in 2006 Song Erdong and Yan Congbin Labor Relations in China: Changes and Current Characteristics Qiao Jian Demographic Analysis of Surplus Rural Labor Cai Fang Performance Assessments of Public Health Investments in China Du Lexun An Analysis of the Issues Concerning Migrant Worker Salaries Zhao Changbao and Wu Zhigang The 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010): A New Phase in the Development of the Cultural Industry Zhang Xiaoming, Hu Huilin and Zhang Jiangang
Readership
All those interested in developments in Chinese society, social policy, and developments in the field of sociology in China. Also an excellent primary source for examining how professors and researchers in China discuss and analyze social issues confronting their country.
About the author(s)
Ru Xin is former vice president of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and a former research fellow at the Philosophy Research Institute of CASS. Lu Xueyi is former director of the Institute of Sociology at CASS and former president of the Chinese Sociological Association of the Academic Committee of CASS. He is currently Professor and Senior Researcher at the Institute of Sociology. Li Peilin is Director of the Institute of Sociology and Director of the Department of Sociology at the Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Editorial Board
International Advisory Board:Yanjie Bian is professor of sociology at the University of Minnesota. He has published books and articles on post-Mao Chinese society, with a focus on social stratification, occupational mobility, and interpersonal networks. Since 2003, he has led a group of social scientists to conduct the Chinese General Social Survey.Nan Lin is Oscar L. Tang Family Professor of Sociology at Duke University. His research interests are in social networks and social capital, the life stress process (especially social support as resources), social stratification and mobility, and Chinese societies.Xueguang Zhou is senior fellow at the Freeman Spongli Institute for International Studies and professor of sociology and at Stanford University. His main area of research is institutional changes in contemporary Chinese society, focusing on Chinese organizations and management, social inequality, and state-society relationships.
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The 2007 volume of The China Society Yearbook, the second volume in the annual China Society Blue Book series to be translated into English, contains important facts and analysis from Chinese scholars on a wide array of issues in China. With over 1.3 billion people and continuous economic growth, Chinese society is experiencing changes on an unprecedented scale. Issues explored in this volume include the progress and goals of the Eleventh Five-Year Plan, China’s rural-to-urban migration, changes in the labor force, labor relations, and consumption habits, assessments of health care and education, analysis of China’s demographic changes, and reports on China’s security, social psychology, and living standards. Along with analysis, this volume offers recommendations and insight into the daunting issues and opportunities facing China as it moves towards a free-market system.
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