Constrained Expertise in India and China
Titel
Constrained Expertise in India and China
Subtitel
Knowledge and Power in Policymaking
Prijs
€ 129,00 excl. BTW
ISBN
9789048562794
Uitvoering
Hardback
Aantal pagina's
276
Taal
Engels
Publicatiedatum
Afmetingen
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Discipline
Aziëstudies
Inhoudsopgave
Toon inhoudsopgaveVerberg inhoudsopgave
Introduction Manjari Mahajan and Mark W. Frazier
PART I: MOBILIZING EXPERTISE: INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURES AND HIERARCHIES WITHIN STATES
Chapter 1 Policymaking and Expertise in Telangana State: Mediating Knowledge and Interests in Pursuit of Economic Development and Social Justice in Hyderabad - Loraine Kennedy and Ram Mohan Chitta
Chapter 2 Experts, Policymaking, and China’s Responses to Covid-19, Xuefei Ren
Chapter 3 Experts and Policymakers in China’s Urban Waste Governance, Ceren Ergenc
Chapter 4 Beyond Local State Corporatism and Entrepreneurial Political Selves: A Governance Assemblage Perspective on the Management of Foreigners in a Chinese County, Ka-Kin Cheuk
PART II: LOGICS OF EXCLUSION - AND OCCASIONAL INCLUSION: POLICYMAKING AND KNOWLEDGE FROM LOCAL COMMUNITIES AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
Chapter 5 Gendering Scholar Activism in China’s Rural Development, Yang Zhan
Chapter 6 Shifting Locations of Knowledge Production for Health Policies: Community Engagement in Palliative Care in the Indian State of Kerala, C U Thresia
Chapter 7 Challenging the Centralized Hierarchy of Civil Nuclear Policy and Expertise in India: Anti-nuclear Opposition from the mid-2000s to late-2010s, Kesava Chandra Varigonda
Chapter 8 Struggle for Stability: Coping with Covid-19 Community-Led Actions and Learning from M-East Ward of Mumbai, Avinash Madhale
PART III: COMPARISONS AND GLOBAL FLOWS
Chapter 9 Knowledge and Power: China’s High-tech Industry and the Perils of a Shifting Global Knowledge Hierarchy, Yu Zhou
Chapter 10 Pushing and Pulling: Institutional Underpinnings of Energy Transitions in India and China, Rohit Chandra
Chapter 11 Why China and India Diverged in Universal Elementary Education Policy: Implementation Measurement and the Culture of Expertise, Wenjuan Zhang
Index

Manjari Mahajan, Mark Frazier (red.)

Constrained Expertise in India and China

Knowledge and Power in Policymaking

De onderstaande tekst is niet beschikbaar in het Nederlands en wordt in het Engels weergegeven.
This book explores the politics of expertise in policymaking in India and China. It asks what kinds of knowledge and knowledge purveyors get mobilized and privileged in decision-making, and who gets sidelined. Through its detailed empirical studies, the volume illuminates a trend of increasing centralization of political authority in both countries which has frequently demanded that experts be aligned with the central government’s agenda. Spaces are shrinking for divergent and oppositional viewpoints, whether these come from the bureaucracy, academia, think tanks, or NGOs. The declining autonomy of experts has been aided by institutional structures, since experts that directly contribute to policymaking have been typically embedded within bureaucracies or dependent on the state rather than occupying independent bases. Both countries face the challenge of how to build and sustain ecosystems of heterogeneous experts that are not simply echo chambers of the state.
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Manjari Mahajan

Manjari Mahajan is Associate Professor of International Affairs and the Starr Professor and Co-Director of the India China Institute at The New School. Her work is on global health, politics of science and technology, development, and philanthrocapitalism.

Mark Frazier

Mark W. Frazier is Professor of Politics at The New School for Social Research, and Co-Director of the India China Institute. His research examines China’s political economy in comparative perspective, including social policy and the politics of population aging.