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In: Europäische Sicherheit & Technik: ES & T ; europäische Sicherheit, Strategie & Technik, Band 69, Heft 9, S. 83-86
ISSN: 2193-746X
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In: Europäische Sicherheit & Technik: ES & T ; europäische Sicherheit, Strategie & Technik, Band 69, Heft 9, S. 83-86
ISSN: 2193-746X
World Affairs Online
In: Europäische Sicherheit & Technik: ES & T ; europäische Sicherheit, Strategie & Technik, Band 71, Heft 6, S. 35-36
ISSN: 2193-746X
World Affairs Online
In: Europäische Sicherheit & Technik: ES & T ; europäische Sicherheit, Strategie & Technik, Band 71, Heft 5, S. 20-23
ISSN: 2193-746X
World Affairs Online
In: Europäische Sicherheit & Technik: ES & T ; europäische Sicherheit, Strategie & Technik, Band 71, Heft 11, S. 61-63
ISSN: 2193-746X
World Affairs Online
In: China perspectives: Shenzhou-zhanwang, Heft 4, S. 49-57
ISSN: 2070-3449, 1011-2006
This paper explores the changing nature of Chinese engagement abroad in the scrap business. Based on primary sources and interviews conducted by the author, it identifies the factors that, at different times, led Chinese scrap dealers and recyclers to extend the scope of their professional activity beyond the borders of their home country. Drawing on recent scholarship in discard studies, the author argues that it is necessary to move beyond the environmental dumping narrative in order to better understand Chinese national policy and its implications. This narrative serves as the main official justification for the bans on imports of recyclable waste that the central government adopted in recent years. However, there is good reason to believe that, by adopting a highly restrictive stance on the international waste trade, the central government sought first and foremost to bolster the municipal solid waste management sector within China. In turn, official support for domestic industrial players makes it possible for some Chinese corporations to emerge as providers of waste collection and recycling services at the international level. The trend, described in the paper, has already begun. It marks a shift from globalisation from below to globalisation from above. (China Perspect/GIGA)
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In: Annuaire français de relations internationales, Band 21, S. 367-378
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In: Annuaire français de relations internationales, Band 21, S. 351-365
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In: Foreign affairs, Band 98, Heft 6, S. 21-29
ISSN: 0015-7120
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In: Jahrbuch des Föderalismus: Föderalismus, Subsidiarität und Regionen in Europa, Band 21, S. 375-388
ISSN: 1616-6558
World Affairs Online
In: Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte: APuZ, Band 71, Heft 1/2, S. 30-37
ISSN: 0479-611X
World Affairs Online
In: Asien: the German journal on contemporary Asia, Heft 160/161, S. 151–168
ISSN: 0721-5231
As an answer to the structural problems facing the Chinese economy, the Chinese leaders proclaimed comprehensive reforms that aim at establishing a united, open and fair market order and a rule by law system for the "new era" of development starting in 2013. The accomplishment of those goals requires the reshaping of the relations between state and market. The paper focuses on one of the most serious problems of the Chinese market system: the administrative monopolies. They are defined as illegal competition constraints conducted by administrative government units. Based on the analysis of the Anti-monopoly Law (AML) enacted in 2008, the paper argues that administrative monopolies as an endogenous obstacle for market functioning were caused by missing coherence of economic reform, reform of justice and of the state administration and the preference for state-owned enterprises as carriers of state industrial policy. The paper also discusses the recent reforms of the governance structure and government institutions, the establishment of a Fair Competition Review Mechanism that aim at enhancing effectiveness and independence of the implementation organ of AML and policy measures related to reshape industrial investment controls. The author sees an urgent need for the Chinese government to cope with administrative monopolies by determining the fundamental role of competition policy, creating and consistently implementing a strong and fair system of competition control anchored in the AML and beyond this. (Asien/GIGA)
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