丁学良的代表作
X.L. DING
(MA 1987 & PhD 1992, Harvard)
Email Address: soxld@ust.hk
Professor
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Dr. Ding is a political sociologist with comparative interest. His research concentrates on the political and social dimensions of the transition from command to market economies in China and in the post-communist countries. He is also interested in the complex interaction among the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the USA. He has been a Research Associate at the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies of The Australian National University.
Representative Publications
Shenme Shi Shijie Yiliu Daxue [On University Reform and Development], Beijing: Peking University Press, 2004.
"Three Institutional Responses to the SARS Crisis: Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan Compared."Prospect Quarterly (in Chinese, Taipei), Vol.5, No.4, 2004.
Yiti de Huiyi [Recollections of Three Revolutions], Taipei: Linking Publishing Company, 2004.
"The Challenges of Managing A Huge Society under Rapid Transformation." Pp.189-214 in China's Post-Jiang Leadership Succession: Problems and Perspective. Edited by John Wong and Zheng Yongnian, Singapore University Press, 2002.
"The Quasi-criminalization of A Business Sector in China." Crime, Law & Social Change, Vol.35, No.3, April 2001.
"Law and Order in A Transitional Society: The Russian Phenomenon." Tsinghua Sociological Review (in Chinese), Vol.1, No.2, December 2000.
"Systemic Irregularity and Spontaneous Property Transformation in the Chinese Financial System." The China Quarterly, Vol.163, Issue 1, 2000.
"Informal Privatization Through Internationalization." British Journal of Political Science, Vol.30, Part 1, 2000.
"The Informal Asset Stripping of Chinese State Firms." The China Journal, No. 43, 2000.
Observing China from the Outside World (in Chinese). Beijing: Chinese Gongshang United Press, 2000.
"Who Gets What, How? When Chinese State-Owned Enterprises Become Shareholding Companies." Problems of Post Communism. Vol.46, No.3, 1999.
"When Chinese Students Meet Western Social Conceptions: Three Roots of Misunderstanding." Hong Kong Journal of Social Sciences, No.10, Autumn 1997. Reprinted in Comparative Economic and Social Systems (Beijing), No.2, 1998 and Archives of the Social Sciences (Beijing) 1998.
"Institutional Amphibiousness and the Transition from Communism." British Journal of Political Science Vol.24, Part 3, 1994.
The Dilemma of Legitimation in China. 1977-1989. New York: Cambridge University Press 1994.
Gongchanzhuyi Hou yu Zhongguo (Post-Communism and China). Hong Kong: Oxford University Press, 1994.
"The East Asian Model and the New Authoritarianism." Chinese Sociology and Anthropology (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe), translated by Stanley Rosen and Gary Zou, Vol.24, No.1, 1991.
Cong Xinma Dao Weber (From Neo-Marxism to Max Weber). Taipei: Linking Publishing Company, 1991.
Ding Xue-liang Ji (Collected Essays of Ding Xue-liang). Heilongjiang, Harbin: The Education Press, 1989.
"The Disparity Between Idealistic and Instrumental Chinese Reformers." Asian Survey (University of California Press), Vol.28, No.11, 1988.