Lobbying and Foreign Interests in Chinese Politics, 1st ed. 2017
Politics and Development of Contemporary China Series

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Language: English

105.49 €

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248 p. · 14.8x21 cm · Hardback
This book offers a series of original arguments on the relationships that Western interest groups have with the Chinese state. It details their lobbying strategies and the leverage it gives them in policy-making in China's political system. Analysis is provided in a comparative context. The author offers inside knowledge on Western business and analyses the nature of business-government relations on domestic Chinese innovation policies. Identifying and analysing the conceptual difference between Chinese and Western actors in their relationship to the state, this book demonstrates how China's existing mechanisms for monitoring activities of Chinese interest groups are ill-suited to exerting a similar degree of control over Western actors.

Chapter 1: Introducing Western lobbying to China .- Chapter 2: Policy-making compared: China, the EU, and the US .- Chapter 3: Trade Barriers for Foreign Business in China .- Chapter 4:Chapter 5: Western Interest Representation in China .- Chapter 6: Lobbying Tools .- Chapter 7: Explaining Western Lobbying Strategies in China .- Chapter 8: Analysis of Western Lobbying Techniques .- Chapter 9: Conclusion

Stefanie Weil is Assistant Professor of International Politics and Business and Associate Dean at Vesalius College, Free University of Brussels, Belgium. She is also Academic Director of the China Europe Business Master at Antwerp Management School, Belgium. Weil is currently engaged in research projects on China China’s transnational advocacy strategy and the power of Western business in China.

Presents a comprehensive review of lobbying efforts of European and US interest groups in China Enriches the scholarly debate and politico-economical discourse with the most recent and in-depth information on how Western businesses aim to influence China’s political system Provides in-depth analyses of non-Chinese actors that complements not only regional China scholarship but also EU and US lobbying literature