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Agrarian Policies of Mainland China
A Documentary Study (1949–1956)
Chao Kuo-chün
Harvard University Press

front cover of Corruption by Design
Corruption by Design
Building Clean Government in Mainland China and Hong Kong
Melanie Manion
Harvard University Press, 2004

This book contrasts experiences of mainland China and Hong Kong to explore the pressing question of how governments can transform a culture of widespread corruption to one of clean government. Melanie Manion examines Hong Kong as the best example of the possibility of reform. Within a few years it achieved a spectacularly successful conversion to clean government. Mainland China illustrates the difficulty of reform. Despite more than two decades of anticorruption reform, corruption in China continues to spread essentially unabated.

The book argues that where corruption is already commonplace, the context in which officials and ordinary citizens make choices to transact corruptly (or not) is crucially different from that in which corrupt practices are uncommon. A central feature of this difference is the role of beliefs about the prevalence of corruption and the reliability of government as an enforcer of rules ostensibly constraining official venality. Anticorruption reform in a setting of widespread corruption is a problem not only of reducing corrupt payoffs, but also of changing broadly shared expectations of venality. The book explores differences in institutional design choices about anticorruption agencies, appropriate incentive structures, and underlying constitutional designs that contribute to the disparate outcomes in Hong Kong and mainland China.

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Economic Planning and Organization in Mainland China
A Documentary Study, 1949–1957, Volume 2
Chao Kuo-chün
Harvard University Press
This is the second volume expanding Agrarian Policies of Mainland China: A Documentary Study, 1949–1956. It presents key documents emanating from Peking, many of them translated into English for the first time.
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