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Zwischen Bilateralismus und Multilateralismus : die Zentralasienpolitik der Volksrepublik China
(2009)
Die Außenpolitik der Volksrepublik China (VRC) ist im Wandel begriffen. Nur ein – wenngleich wesentlicher – Ausdruck dessen ist die erst seit wenigen Jahren zu beobachtende Entwicklung, dass sich die VRC vermehrt multilateralen Institutionen zuwendet und diese mittlerweile zum Teil gar selbst initiiert. Dieser Trend stellt eine radikale Kehrtwende gegenüber dem dar, was die VRC seit ihrer Gründung 1949 noch bis weit in die 1990er-Jahre hinein mit Multilateralismus (ML) assoziiert hat – nämlich Mechanismen zur Strafung und Einengung der VRC. Doch welche praktische Bedeutung kommt multilateralen Wirkungsweisen innerhalb der chinesischen Außenpolitik in jüngster Zeit tatsächlich zu? Die vorliegende Magisterarbeit beschäftigt sich mit dieser Fragestellung, indem sie zu analysieren sucht, welche Rolle multilaterale Strukturen – im Gegensatz zu bilateralen – bei der Implementierung chinesischer außenpolitischer Interessen spielen. Dies geschieht anhand eines einzigartigen Fallbeispiels, und zwar der chinesischen Zentralasienpolitik, innerhalb der wiederum die Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) eine herausragende Stellung einnimmt. Diese Organisation ist das einzige multilaterale Forum, an dem die VRC von Beginn an als der maßgebende Akteur im Hinblick auf ideelle, konzeptionelle und inhaltliche Belange teilgenommen hat. Entsprechend ist davon auszugehen, dass die Untersuchung ein Höchstmaß an Einblicken in den tatsächlich intendierten Zweck des chinesischen ML zu liefern vermag. Die Analyse zeigt, dass multilaterale Vorgehensweisen in quantitativer Hinsicht seit Gründung der SCO im Jahre 2001 stark zugenommen haben, und das auf allen vier identifizierten Hauptinteressensgebieten der VRC in Zentralasien: Sicherheit, Wirtschaft, Energie und Geopolitik. Mit Blick auf die qualitative Komponente ist indessen zu konstatieren, dass dem ML, den China in der Region praktiziert, einige negativ behaftete Charakteristika zu eigen sind. Die Attribute „flexibel“, „selektiv“, „flach“ und „instrumentalisiert“, die derzeit weitgehend als prägend für den chinesischen ML in seiner Gesamtheit angesehen werden, besitzen auch – und gerade – in Zentralasien ihre Gültigkeit. Insgesamt fällt auf, dass die VRC multilaterale Strategien nur dann verfolgt, wenn der kurzfristige Eigennutzen über den bilateraler Mechanismen hinausgeht. Und auch dann hört der Rückgriff auf ML dort auf, wo der eigene Gewinn ein Maximum erreicht. Somit bleiben die chinesischen Machthaber den Praxisbeweis einer integrativen Funktion von ML noch schuldig.
Two decades after the predicted “end of ideology”, we are observing a re-emphasis on party ideology under Hu Jintao. The paper looks into the reasons for and the factors shaping the re-formulation of the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) ideology since 2002 and assesses the progress and limits of this process. Based on the analysis of recent elite debates, it is argued that the remaking of ideology has been the consequence of perceived challenges to the legitimacy of CCP rule. Contrary to many Western commentators, who see China’s successful economic performance as the most important if not the only source of regime legitimacy, Chinese party theorists and scholars have come to regard Deng Xiaoping’s formula of performance-based legitimacy as increasingly precarious. In order to tackle the perceived “performance dilemma” of party rule, the adaptation and innovation of party ideology is regarded as a crucial measure to relegitimize CCP rule.
New industries are recognized as new impetus to national wealth. At the same time, they are increasingly becoming geographically concentrated in some well defined areas. But current studies on the emergence of industrial clusters tend to analyze favorable driving factors. This dissertation takes the example of a Chinese endogenous industrial cluster, the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) cluster at Tonghua, a small peripheral city in Northeastern China, to contribute to the theoretical understanding of the emergence of industrial cluster as a co-evolutionary process of organizations, institutions and firms, or, to put it more broadly, as economic evolution embedded in complex socio-economic contexts. The recent advance in evolutionary and co-evolutionary economics which considers the economy and economic landscape as dynamic process instead of equilibrium can be regarded as a part of broader and more intellectual turn of quest for history in social sciences. Although the principle of "history matters" is widely acknowledged, it tends to be reduced to a quite simple concept of "path dependence". However, path dependence cannot offer space for new path creation, except from an external shock. Accordingly, the role of human conscious action or Schumpeterian innovation should be added to path analysis through the concept of path creation. Furthermore, and more importantly, history should be understood as context, and historical context can be explored through the understanding of multi-paths and interaction among them over time. So path inter-dependence (co-evolution between paths) would be useful to better understand the complexity of real history. Since the industrial cluster is composed of interconnected firms and is also subject to changes in institution and technology, I will focus on the multi-way causal relationship between firm, institution and technology. The theorizing is not entirely new, but most of the theoretical and empirical discussions are at the national or industrial level, not regional or local one. A competitive cluster can be regarded as a co-evolutionary hotspot in which multiple populations actively interact and are interconnected. Co-evolution itself is a dynamic and evolutionary process. So I will adopt a dynamic and evolutionary view to examine co-evolutionary degree or co-evolutionary effects in the Tonghua pharmaceutical cluster through time. After a brief introduction which deals with the national institutional changes that are highly associated with new venture creation, entrepreneurship, and innovation, with registrations on drug and healthcare system, and with changes in market demand of China’s pharmaceutical industry and geographical distribution, I will collect evidences from three aspects based upon field survey and second hand data, i.e., the history of the enterprises, the origin of entrepreneurship, and the knowledge of evolution, linking their respective generative relationships through the genealogical method. In this volume, the evolution of the Tonghua pharmaceutical firm organization, the formation of local entrepreneurship, historical accumulation of knowledge, and particular knowledge of transfer among generations of firms will be discussed, then I will probe into co-adaption and co-evolution between local formal and informal institutions and organizations in Tonghua’s TCM industry. In addition, I will try to understand the co-evolutionary process at different geographical levels (namely, national and local). In summary, my main findings include the following several points. Firstly, in the course of the emergence of Tonghua’s pharmaceutical industry, local social networks and the traditional alliance between enterprises and government have played important roles. Secondly, the most important factor that influences the evolution of endogenous industrial clusters such as the Tonghua pharmaceutical industry in transitional countries is not the change in technology, but the change in fundamental national institutions. Thirdly, the success of the Tonghua pharmaceutical industry can be ascribed to the creation of multiple paths largely based on initial conditions, which implies that economic policy should have historical consciousness, namely, new economic innovation should make full use of both historical legacies and existing assets. Finally, it is co-adaption and co-selection of firm organization, institution, and technology that have jointly made Tonghua’s pharmaceutical industry become highly competitive, which means that whether one region can grasp new opportunities partially depends on its capabilities to coordinate a varity of development agents.
A new species of the basal araneomorph spider genus Ectatosticta (Araneae, Hypochilidae) from China
(2009)
The hypochilid spider Ectatosticta davidi (Simon) is redescribed on the basis of adults from Mt. Taibaishan in Shaanxi Province, China; the specimens from Qinghai Province previously identified as E. davidi by most modern authors belong to a new species described as E. deltshevi. Keywords: Araneae, Araneomorphae, Hypochilidae, Ectatosticta, China
A decorated pair of trousers excavated from a well-preserved tomb in the Tarim Basin proved to have a highly informative life history, teased out by the authors – with archaeological, historical and art historical dexterity. Probably created under Greek influence in a Bactrian palace, the textile started life in the third/second century BC as an ornamental wall hanging, showing a centaur blowing a war-trumpet and a nearly life-size warrior of the steppe with his spear. The palace was raided by nomads, one of whom worked a piece of the tapestry into a pair of trousers. They brought no great luck to the wearer who ended his days in a massacre by the Xiongnu, probably in the first century BC. The biography of this garment gives a vivid glimpse of the dynamic life of Central Asia at the end of the first millennium.