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Roger Irvine - Forecasting Chinas Future: Dominance or Collapse?

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Roger Irvine Forecasting Chinas Future: Dominance or Collapse?
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Forecasting Chinas Future: Dominance or Collapse?: summary, description and annotation

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Chinas future development is likely to have a huge impact on twenty-first century global outcomes. It is therefore surprising that, thus far, so little attention has been given to comparing and evaluating expert forecasts of Chinas future in the post-Mao era.This book presents an illuminating and comprehensive summary record of contrasting and competing expert forecasts and judgements about the major issues confronting China within four principal domains political, economic, environmental, and international. After considering the principal forecasting methods available to experts, the author comments critically on the degree of success achieved in using those methods and emphasises the confusion created by the polarisation of opinion and by the failure of many experts to accept the high degree of uncertainty that characterises most of the key issues. The book recommends a new approach based on the study of a hierarchy of critical uncertainties and on continuing analysis of opposing expert opinions about these uncertainties. It emphasises the potential for both positive and negative outcomes for these critical uncertainties, and the importance of maximising the potential for positive outcomes through improved analytical and policy frameworks.Providing insights for specialists and non-specialists into the most critical issues that will determine Chinas future direction, this book will be of particular interest to students and scholars of political, economic, environmental, and international relations issues in China and Asia, as well as to readers in business and government.

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It is fascinating to review the diverse forecasts that experts have made in recent years about Chinas politics, economy, environment, and international relations. How is it possible that they disagree so much? Irvine wisely counsels caution, insisting that we must allow critical uncertainties to temper our ambition to know the future.
Andrew J. Nathan, Class of 1919 Professor of Political Science,
Columbia University
In all the discussion over the implications of Chinas rise, one of the knottiest questions is just what sort of a China is it going to be. Roger Irvine offers a unique and path-breaking contribution to the task of forecasting Chinas role, with special attention paid to the relationship between China experts and the uncertainty that is intrinsic to this challenging but necessary enterprise. His balancing of theory with practical case studies of prediction across a variety of fields is exemplary, and his conclusions are judicious and well supported by the evidence he presents.
Richard Rigby, Professorial Fellow, Crawford School of Public Policy,
Australian National University
Forecasting Chinas Future
Chinas future development is likely to have a huge impact on twenty- first century global outcomes. It is therefore surprising that, thus far, so little attention has been given to comparing and evaluating expert forecasts of Chinas future in the post-Mao era.
This book presents an illuminating and comprehensive summary record of contrasting and competing expert forecasts and judgements about the major issues confronting China within four principal domains political, economic, environmental, and international. After considering the principal forecasting methods available to experts, the author comments critically on the degree of success achieved in using those methods and emphasises the confusion created by the polarisation of opinion and by the failure of many experts to accept the high degree of uncertainty that characterises most of the key issues. The book recommends a new approach based on the study of a hierarchy of critical uncertainties and on continuing analysis of opposing expert opinions about these uncertainties. It emphasises the potential for both positive and negative outcomes for these critical uncertainties, and the importance of maximising the potential for positive outcomes through improved analytical and policy frameworks.
Providing insights for specialists and non- specialists into the most critical issues that will determine Chinas future direction, this book will be of particular interest to students and scholars of political, economic, environmental, and international relations issues in China and Asia, as well as to readers in business and government.
Roger Irvine is a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Adelaide, South Australia. He was a visiting scholar at Tsinghua University, China during 2010 and at National Chengchi University, Taiwan during 2014.
Routledge Contemporary China Series
1 Nationalism, Democracy and National Integration in China
Leong Liew and Wang Shaoguang
2 Hong Kongs Tortuous Democratization
A comparative analysis
Ming Sing
3 Chinas Business Reforms
Institutional challenges in a globalised economy
Edited by Russell Smyth, On Kit Tam, Malcolm Warner and Cherrie Zhu
4 Challenges for Chinas Development
An enterprise perspective
Edited by David H. Brown and Alasdair MacBean
5 New Crime in China
Public order and human rights
Ron Keith and Zhiqiu Lin
6 Non- Governmental Organizations in Contemporary China
Paving the way to civil society?
Qiusha Ma
7 Globalization and the Chinese City
Fulong Wu
8 The Politics of Chinas Accession to the World Trade Organization
The dragon goes global
Hui Feng
9 Narrating China
Jia Pingwa and his fictional world
Yiyan Wang
10 Sex, Science and Morality in China
Joanne McMillan
11 Politics in China Since 1949
Legitimizing authoritarian rule
Robert Weatherley
12 International Human Resource Management in Chinese Multinationals
Jie Shen and Vincent Edwards
13 Unemployment in China
Economy, human resources and labour markets
Edited by Grace Lee and Malcolm Warner
14 China and Africa
Engagement and compromise
Ian Taylor
15 Gender and Education in China
Gender discourses and womens schooling in the early twentieth century
Paul J. Bailey
16 SARS
Reception and interpretation in three Chinese cities
Edited by Deborah Davis and Helen Siu
17 Human Security and the Chinese State
Historical transformations and the modern quest for sovereignty
Robert E. Bedeski
18 Gender and Work in Urban China
Women workers of the unlucky generation
Liu Jieyu
19 Chinas State Enterprise Reform
From Marx to the market
John Hassard, Jackie Sheehan, Meixiang Zhou, Jane Terpstra- Tong and Jonathan Morris
20 Cultural Heritage Management in China
Preserving the cities of the Pearl River Delta
Edited by Hilary du Cros and Yok- shiu F. Lee
21 Paying for Progress
Public finance, human welfare and inequality in china
Edited by Vivienne Shue and Christine Wong
22 Chinas Foreign Trade Policy
The new constituencies
Edited by Ka Zeng
23 Hong Kong, China
Learning to belong to a nation
Gordon Mathews, Tai- lok Lui, and Eric Kit-wai Ma
24 China Turns to Multilateralism
Foreign policy and regional security
Edited by Guoguang Wu and Helen Lansdowne
25 Tourism and Tibetan Culture in Transition
A place called Shangrila shild Kols
26 Chinas Emerging Cities
The making of new urbanism
Edited by Fulong Wu
27 ChinaUS Relations Transformed
Perceptions and strategic interactions
Edited by Suisheng Zhao
28 The Chinese Party- State in the 21st Century
Adaptation and the reinvention of legitimacy
Edited by Andr Lalibert and Marc Lanteigne
29 Political Change in Macao
Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo
30 Chinas Energy Geopolitics
The Shanghai Cooperation Organization and Central Asia
Thrassy N. Marketos
31 Regime Legitimacy in Contemporary China
Institutional change and stability
Edited by Thomas Heberer and Gunter Schubert
32 USChina Relations
China policy on Capitol Hill
Tao Xie
33 Chinese Kinship
Contemporary anthropological perspectives
Edited by Susanne Brandtstdter and Gonalo D. Santos
34 Politics and Government in Hong Kong
Crisis under Chinese sovereignty
Edited by Ming Sing
35 Rethinking Chinese Popular Culture
Cannibalizations of the canon
Edited by Carlos Rojas and Eileen Cheng-yin Chow
36 Institutional Balancing in the Asia Pacific
Economic interdependence and Chinas rise
Kai He
37 Rent Seeking in China
Edited by Tak-Wing Ngo and Yongping Wu
38 China, Xinjiang and Central Asia
History, transition and crossborder interaction into the 21st century
Edited by Colin Mackerras and Michael Clarke
39 Intellectual Property Rights in China
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