The Chinese state, oil and energy security /

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taylor, Monique (Author)
Published: Palgrave Macmillan,
Publisher Address: Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire
Publication Dates: 2014.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Series: International political economy series
Subjects:
Carrier Form: xiv, 213 pages ; 23 cm.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 188-206) and index.
ISBN: 9781137350541 :
1137350547
Index Number: HD9576
CLC: F426.22
Call Number: F426.22/T244
Contents: Machine generated contents note: 1.A Party-State Centred Explanation of Policymaking in China's Oil Sector -- China's oil security dilemma -- China's oil policy approach -- Building oil state capacity -- Political and bureaucratic hierarchies of authority -- Beijing's evolving conceptualisation of energy security -- Socioeconomic dimensions of oil policy -- Oil industry and firm development under market transition -- Research methods -- Organisation and chapter synopses -- 2.Sectoral Governance and State Capacity -- The concept of state capacity -- State capacity and autonomy -- Contrasting views of state capacity in China -- 3.The Interplay of Elite and Bureaucratic Power -- The FA perspective on China's energy policymaking -- The neglected role of the CCP ...
Contents note continued: Early lessons in the pitfalls of foreign oil dependency -- The pursuit of self-reliance during the Great Leap Forward -- The realisation of oil self-sufficiency under Mao -- Construction of the third front and the Cultural Revolution -- The slow shift away from economic autarky in oil sector development -- 5.Decentralisation and Corporatisation of the Oil Sector (1978--2002) -- Foreign participation in oil sector development under reform and opening -- The creation of China's NOCs: CNOOC, Sinopec and CNPC -- The oil price reform conundrum ...
Contents note continued: Ownership and regulation of China's NOCs -- NOC leadership -- The `go global' policy -- Beijing's oil diplomacy -- 8.Authoritarian State Capacity in a Liberal World Order -- The rise of China's market authoritarianism model -- Implications of China's state-led oil strategies for business and politics.