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hy as 21st-century China—and no book could be timelier than Dragon Rising,
appearing just as world attention begins to focus on the 2008 Beijing
Olympics and China's all-out effort to present itself as a modern world
power. As interest grows, Becker is the ideal guide to the profound
changes that are already reshaping economic, diplomatic, and military
strategies all over the globe.
Intertwining in-depth analysis with revealing anecdotal evidence,
Becker addresses every major question. What form will China's
government take? How will communism's legacy affect modernization? Can
Shanghai's success with urban capitalism be replicated elsewhere? Will
wholesale cultural and economic change be resisted by the millions
facing sudden transition from an authoritarian state to a market-driven
society? How will the new China cope with pollution, unemployment, and
voracious demand for energy? Each chapter examines a specific region
and such key local issues as poverty, minority unrest, and official
corruption, then places them in the broader context of Chinese society
as a whole.
Vividly illustrated with photographs that capture the paradox of an
ancient culture remaking itself into a dynamic consumer society, Dragon
Rising is a wonderfully written, well-rounded, wide-ranging portrait of
China's problems and prospects.
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