ABSTRACT

Drawing on hundreds of interviews with top Chinese officials, parliamentarians, scholars, and businessmen, Willy Lam, a renowned journalist and writer on Chinese affairs, presents a first-hand, multi-dimensional account of twenty-first century China and the impact of fourth generation leaders, including President Hu Jinato and Premier Wen Jiabao. Lam goes behind the glitzy facade of nouveau-riche Beijing and Shanghai to examine how the Hu leadership has tried to extend the Communist Party's "mandate of heaven" by tackling an array of daunting problems: the weakening legitimacy of the Party's leadership; restive peasants; angry workers; political stagnation over the lack of reform; foreign relations difficulties; unreliable energy supplies; resurgent nationalism; and the increasingly dubious "Chinese model" of development. The author assesses possible contributions that the new classes of private businessmen, professionals, and intellectuals - as well as new ideas such as nationalism, globalization, and federalism - will make to economic prosperity and political liberalization. The book also includes a chapter on foreign policy, which contains an insightful account of Beijing's evolving and sometimes difficult relations with the United States, Europe, Japan, and other major countries and blocs, as well as the role of the People's Liberation Army.

chapter 1|31 pages

Introduction

The Rise of Hu Jintao and the Traits of the Fourth-Generation Leadership

chapter 2|29 pages

The Crisis of Legitimacy

Hu Jintao's Search for a Perennial Mandate of Heaven

chapter 3|44 pages

The Communist Party vs. Peasants and Workers

Will Hu Jintao's “New Social Contract” Work?

chapter 4|50 pages

The Scourge of Governmental Stagnation

The Price of Holding Up Political Reform

chapter 7|44 pages

Conclusion

Where Is the New Thinking?