ABSTRACT

The years of the Ma Ying-jiu presidency in Taiwan were controversial from the beginning. When he came to power in 2008, Ma was considered the strongest and most popular KMT presidential candidate since Lee Teng-hui. However, his rapprochement towards China met with increasing resistance and by the time he stepped down in 2016, he enjoyed the lowest support rates of any incumbent president. What happened in between?

This book undertakes a balanced empirical assessment of the achievements and failures of the Ma Ying-jiu era. Renowned Taiwan scholars analyse the changing political environment that shaped the Ma presidency, covering important topics such as Taiwan’s evolving nationalism and rising civil societal activism, cross-strait economic integration and migration, and the factors determining its ‘international space’.

As the first comprehensive scholarly work on the Ma Ying-jiu presidency, this books is a must read for students and scholars of Taiwanese politics and society, cross-strait relations and East Asian politics in general.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Mapping the Ma Ying-jiu Era

part I|144 pages

Domestic Politics

chapter 1|20 pages

The KMT’s China policy

Gains and failures

chapter 3|31 pages

Taiwanese nationalism in the age of cross-Strait integration

Predominance and pragmatism in the Ma Ying-jiu era

chapter 4|19 pages

Economic interests or national sovereignty

Public opinion on the cross-Strait dilemma during the Ma Ying-jiu era

chapter 5|23 pages

The rise of civil society activism in the Ma Ying-jiu era

The genesis and outcomes of the Sunflower Movement

part II|88 pages

Cross-Strait Political Economy

chapter 8|16 pages

Chinese investment in Taiwan in the Ma Ying-jiu era

The opportunities and the risks

chapter 9|16 pages

The drift

Industrial policy under President Ma

chapter 10|23 pages

The political economy of the cross-Strait rapprochement

Anatomy of a hegemonic project