Description
The Nature of Asian Politics provides an unparalleled, comprehensive first look at the politics of Southeast and Northeast Asia.
About the Author
Bruce Gilley is a leading international scholar on the comparative and international politics of Asia and China and an expert on questions of democracy, state building, and political legitimacy. He is an Associate Professor of Political Science and the director of the doctoral program in public affairs and policy in the Mark O. Hatfield School of Government at Portland State University. His books include The Right to Rule and China's Democratic Future. His research articles have appeared in journals such as Comparative Political Studies, Environmental Politics, and Political Science Quarterly. He serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Democracy and the Journal of Contemporary China.
Reviews
'In an era in which social science research is often narrow and inaccessible, Bruce Gilley has produced a refreshing, ambitious and innovative book on the nature of Asian politics. Gilley demonstrates an Asian model of governance that emphasizes the central and dominant role of state power and its continually changing relationship to society via the social goods provided by the state. It is sure to spark spirited and contentious debate on the distinctive character and shape of Asian politics.' Kanishka Jayasuriya, Director, Indo-Pacific Governance Research Centre (IPGRC), University of Adelaide
'Bruce Gilley has produced the boldest, freshest claims about a distinctive East Asian model that have been heard in years. Everything is in here - democracy, development, governance and policy. ... strong states drive it all. But as Gilley shows, the grip that states have on their societies and economies does not depend solely on institutions and coercion. Using a notion of 'refined Oriental despotism', he argues instead that across the region, states are derived from societal forces and historical records. A major new entrant in vital debates over East Asia's striking advances.' William Case, City University of Hong Kong
'Is there a unique 'Asian' form of politics? This is the important and challenging question at the heart of Bruce Gilley's The Nature of Asian Politics. Negotiating the extremes of 'Asian dynamism' and 'Oriental despotism', Gilley proposes an 'Asian governance model', a form of Asian social contract, as the key to understanding politics in fourteen countries in Northeast and Southeast Asia. This articulate and ambitious book is a timely and thought-provoking contribution to our understanding of the Asian region and the study of politics more generally.' Haig Patapan, Director, Centre for Governance and Public Policy, Griffith University, Queensland
'... I feel that Bruce Gilley's book is very fresh and well-versed in Asian politics in terms of the basic political science concepts like state and society, development, democracy, governance, and public policy. Gilley should be applauded since Asian comparative politics has been dominated either by Western-biased modernization theory and fixed political culture narratives or by those area specialists sticking to the description of a society and politics they respectively specialize in." Takashi Inoguchi, Pacific Affairs
Book Information
ISBN 9780521761710
Author Bruce Gilley
Format Hardback
Page Count 272
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 510g
Dimensions(mm) 236mm * 156mm * 18mm