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1

Guobing, Xun, ed. Zhongguo 50 fu hao: Forbes China's richest entrepreneurs. Hei ge wen hua chu ban tu shu you xian gong si, 2002.

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2

Chen, Jie. Allies of the state: China's private entrepreneurs and democratic change. Harvard University Press, 2010.

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3

J, Dickson Bruce, ed. Allies of the state: China's private entrepreneurs and democratic change. Harvard University Press, 2010.

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4

Heirs of the dragon: China's new entrepreneurs in the aftermath of Tiananmen Square. Cadence Books, 1995.

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5

Mandate of heaven: A new generation of entrepreneurs, dissidents, bohemians, and technocrats lays claim to China's future. Simon & Schuster, 1994.

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6

Schell, Orville. Mandate of heaven: A new generation of entrepreneurs, dissidents, Bohemians and technocrats lays claim to China's future. Warner, 1995.

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7

Shui yu zheng feng: Shen shi dang dai Zhongguo fu hao de chuang fu ao mi = China's richest entrepreneurs. Jin cheng chu ban she, 2003.

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8

Krug, Barbara. China's Rational Entrepreneurs. Taylor & Francis Group, 2004.

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9

Back-Alley Banking: Private Entrepreneurs in China. Cornell University Press, 2004.

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10

Back-Alley Banking: Private Entrepreneurs in China. Cornell University Press, 2002.

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11

Tsai, Kellee S. Back-Alley Banking: Private Entrepreneurs in China. Cornell University Press, 2018.

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12

(Editor), John Wong, Rong Ma (Editor), and Mu Yang (Editor), eds. China's Rural Entrepreneurs: Ten Case Studies. Times Academic Press,Singapore, 1995.

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13

China's rural entrepreneurs: Ten case studies. Times Academic Press, 1995.

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14

Made in China: Secrets of China's Dynamic Entrepreneurs. Wiley-Interscience, 2009.

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15

Nie, Winter, Katherine Xin, and Lily Zhang. Made in China: Secrets of China's Dynamic Entrepreneurs. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2012.

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16

Nie, Winter, Katherine Xin, and Lily Zhang. Made in China: Secrets of China's Dynamic Entrepreneurs. Wiley & Sons, Limited, John, 2015.

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17

Krug, Barbara. China's Rational Entrepreneurs: The Development of the New Private Sector. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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18

Krug, Barbara. China's Rational Entrepreneurs: The Development of the New Private Sector. Taylor & Francis Group, 2004.

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19

Krug, Barbara. China's Rational Entrepreneurs: The Development of the New Private Sector. Taylor & Francis Group, 2004.

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20

Krug, Barbara. China's Rational Entrepreneurs: The Development of the New Private Sector. Taylor & Francis Group, 2004.

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21

Dickson, Bruce J., and Jie Chen. Allies of the State: China's Private Entrepreneurs and Democratic Change. Harvard University Press, 2010.

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22

1950-, Krug Barbara, ed. China's rational entrepreneurs: The development of the new private business sector. Routledge, 2004.

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23

Huang, Yukon. Origins of China’s Growth Model. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190630034.003.0003.

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Deng Xiaoping’s most celebrated achievement was to reshape economic incentives and concentrate development along China’s coast. In doing so, he set the stage for what is referred to as China’s unbalanced growth process. Premier Zhu Rongji kept the growth momentum going by overhauling key financial and economic institutions in response to the Asian Financial Crisis. These reforms led to unprecedented double-digit GDP growth over the three decades prior to 2010. Both Deng Xiaoping and Zhu Rongji were “policy entrepreneurs.” Through their ideas and actions, they were able to overcome vested interests, all while taking risks and launching new reform initiatives. Progress on the reform agenda slowed in the years leading up to the Global Financial Crisis as the subsequent leadership was lulled into a false sense of confidence because of China’s strong economic performance.
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24

Tomizawa, Satoshi. Heirs Of The Dragon: China's New Entrepreneurs In The Aftermath Of Tiananmen Square. VIZ Media LLC, 1996.

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25

Xibing, Zhou. Wang Wei and SF Express: A Biography of One of China's Greatest Entrepreneurs. LID Publishing, 2020.

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26

Schultz, Corey Kai Nelson. Moving Figures. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474421614.001.0001.

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This book examines how the films of the Chinese Sixth Generation filmmaker Jia Zhangke evoke the affective “felt” experience of China’s contemporary social and economic transformations, by examining the class figures of worker, peasant, soldier, intellectual, and entrepreneur that are found in the films. Each chapter analyzes a figure’s socio-historical context, its filmic representation, and its recurring cinematic tropes in order to understand how they create what Raymond Williams calls “structures of feeling” – feelings that concretize around particular times, places, generations, and classes that are captured and evoked in art – and charts how this felt experience has changed over the past forty years of China’s economic reforms. The book argues that that Jia’s cinema should be understood not just as narratives that represent Chinese social change, but also as an effort to engage the audience’s emotional responses during this period of China’s massive and fast-paced transformation.
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27

Zhang, Marina, Mark Dodgson, and David Gann. Demystifying China's Innovation Machine. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198861171.001.0001.

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China’s extraordinary economic development is explained in large part by the way it innovates. This book explains how it innovates, which has important implications not only for China but also for the rest of the world. Contrary to widely held views, China’s innovation machine is not created and controlled by an all-powerful government. Instead, it is a complex, interdependent system composed of hundreds of millions of elements, involving bottom-up innovation driven by innovators and entrepreneurs and highly pragmatic and adaptive top-down policy. Using case studies of leading firms and industries, statistics, and policy analysis, the book argues that China’s innovation machine is similar to a natural ecosystem. Innovations in technology, organization, and business model resemble genetic mutations which are random, self-serving and isolated initially, but the best fitting are selected by the market and their impacts are amplified by the innovation machine. This machine draws on China’s massive number of manufacturers, supply chains, innovation clusters, and digitally literate population, connected through supersized digital platforms. China’s innovation suffers from a lack of basic research and reliance upon certain critical technologies from overseas; its scale (size) and scope (diversity) possess attributes that make it self-correcting and stronger in the face of challenges. China’s innovation machine is most effective in a policy environment where the market prevails; policy intervention plays a significant role when market mechanisms are premature or fail. The book concludes that the future success of China’s innovation will depend on continuing policy pragmatism, mass entrepreneurship and innovation, and the development of the ‘new infrastructures’.
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28

Krug, Barbara. China's Rational Entrepreneurs: The development of the new private sector (Routledgecurzon Studies on China in Transition). RoutledgeCurzon, 2004.

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29

Rofel, Lisa, and Carlos Rojas, eds. New World Orderings. Duke University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478023647.

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The contributors to New World Orderings demonstrate that China’s twenty-first-century rise occurs not only through economics and state politics but equally through the mutual entanglements of overlapping social, economic, and cultural worlds in Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America. They show how the Chinese state has sought to reconfigure the nation’s position in the world and the centrality of trade, labor, religion, migration, gender, race, and literature to this reconfiguration. Among other topics, the contributors examine China’s post-Bandung cultural diplomacy with African nations, how West African “pastor-entrepreneurs” in China interpreted and preached the prosperity doctrine, the diversity of Chinese-Argentine social relations in the soy supply chain, and the ties between China and India within the complex history of inter-Asian exchange and Chinese migration to Southeast Asia. By examining China’s long historical relationship with the Global South, this volume presents a non-state-centric history of China that foregrounds the importance of transnational communicative and imaginative worldmaking processes and interactions. Contributors. Andrea Bachner, Luciano Damián Bolinaga, Nellie Chu, Rachel Cypher, Mingwei Huang, T. Tu Huynh, Yu-lin Lee, Ng Kim Chew, Lisa Rofel, Carlos Rojas, Shuang Shen, Derek Sheridan, Nicolai Volland
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30

Wang, Yong. Made in China: Que podemos aprender de los empresarios chinos / What Western Managers Can Learn from Trailblazing Chinese Entrepreneurs. Norma S A Editorial, 2006.

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31

Chen, Calvin P. Organizing Production across Regions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190846374.003.0012.

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Wenzhou, once a neglected locale on China’s southeastern seaboard, has in the post-Mao era experienced tremendous economic growth and produced some of the country’s most successful entrepreneurs. With the acceleration of Chinese out-migration in the post–Cold War era, key features of the “Wenzhou model”—extensive use of social capital, self-reliance, and risk-taking—have appeared among Chinese businesses across Europe. This chapter examines this phenomenon through a cross-regional ethnographic approach. Although ethnography is typically site-specific, for the purpose of tracing diaspora practices and experiences, it is feasible and fruitful to conduct ethnography across areas. Such an approach illuminates surprising parallels between the “Wenzhou model” and its newer incarnation in Prato, Italy. It also traces economic success of the Chinese there to their ability to recognize and exploit certain similarities between Wenzhou and Prato, and to the Wenzhounese’s long-standing ability to adapt core business practices to “fit” better with different environments.
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32

PUBLISHERS, Prime. Biography of Zhang Yiming: Founder, Chairman and CEO of ByteDance. One of China's Billionaire Internet Entrepreneur. He Founded ByteDance in 2012 and Developed Toutiao and TikTok,. Independently Published, 2021.

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33

DeHart, Monica. Transpacific Developments. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501759420.001.0001.

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This book intervenes in the debates of China's growing presence in Latin America with original ethnographic research that challenges conventional thinking about who and what constitutes Chinese development in Central America, how it is perceived locally, and what it portends for the future. The book makes visible the history of transregional encounters and relations that have produced local development, including Central America's partnership with Taiwan, the formative role of the Chinese diaspora, and US interventions. That history illuminates how Orientalist formulations of racial and cultural difference continue to shape local perceptions of Chinese initiatives despite the presence of multiple forms of Chineseness. Interviews with politicians, bureaucrats, entrepreneurs, labor leaders, development consultants, ethnic associations and everyday citizens in Guatemala, Costa Rica and Nicaragua, highlight the centrality of trade, infrastructure, and corruption as key arenas for debating Chinese influence. The book shows why current development collaborations with Beijing cannot be perceived as wholly new or unique, nor its outcomes predetermined. Instead, a longer history of transpacific relations and ideas of difference define local expectations for what Chinese development might mean for Central American futures and the forms of identity and sovereignty on which they will rely.
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