03335cam a2200457 i 450000100090000000300070000900500170001600800410003301000170007402000310009102000310012202000330015303500130018604000210019904200080022004300120022805000250024024501150026524600380038026000090041826400640042730000460049133600260053733700280056333800270059149000310061850400510064950506280070052009860132853600730231465000500238765000410243765000470247865100420252565100360256765500240260370000330262770000320266071000620269277601230275423277233US-DLC20260219101509.0230814t20242024miua b 001 0 eng  a 2023030662 z9780472076352q(hardcover) a9780472056354q(paperback) z9780472903733q(ebook other) a23277233 aaubengerdacau apcc aa-cc---00aDS779.46b.C432 202400aChina as number one? :bthe emerging values of a rising power /cedited by Yang Zhong and Ronald F. Inglehart.30aEmerging values of a rising power c2024 1aAnn Arbor, Michigan :bUniversity of Michigan Press,c2024. axvi, 221 pages :billustrations ;c24 cm. atextbtxt2rdacontent aunmediatedbn2rdamedia avolumebnc2rdacarrier1 aChina understandings today aIncludes bibliographical references and index.00gPreface /rMary E. Gallagher and Yang Zhong --gIntroduction /rRonald Inglehart and Yang Zhong --tDemocratic Authoritarianism: A Study of Chinese Political Orientations /rWenfang Tang --tPolitical Participation in China /rLingnan He and Dali L. Yang --tPostmaterialism in China /rYu Yan --tContained Emancipative Values: Waves of Conservative and Liberal Trends in China /rJohn James --gThetRise and Fall of Trust in Transitional China /rAlfred M. Wu, Eduardo Araral, and Biao Huang --tAttitudes toward Religion, Science and Technology in China /rYang Zhong --gConclusions /rYang Zhong and Ronald Inglehart.3 aOne of the most significant global events in the last forty years has been the rise of China- economically, technologically, politically, and militarily. The question on people's minds for decades has been whether China will replace the United States as a superpower in the near future. But for China, this power must be comprehensive - having strong economic and militant forces are only two pieces of the puzzle. China must also possess soft power, such as attractive ideologies, values, and culture. China as Number One? explores China's soft powers through the eyes of Chinese citizens. Utilizing data from the World Values Survey, the contributors to this collection explore the potential soft power of a rising China by examining its residents' social values. A comprehensive study of changes and continuities in the political and social values of Chinese citizens, the book examines findings in the context of evolutionary modernization theory and cross-national comparison. aSponsored by The Lieberthal-Rogel Center for Chinese Studies (LRCCS) 0aPower (Social sciences)zChinay21st century. 0aPublic opinionzChinay21st century. 7aPOLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Asian2bisacsh 0aChinaxPolitics and governmenty2002- 0aChinaxSocial conditionsy2000- 0aPrint books.2local1 aZhong, Yang,d1960-eeditor.1 aInglehart, Ronald,eeditor.2 aMichigan Publishing (University of Michigan),epublisher.08iOnline version:tChina as number one?dAnn Arbor : University of Michigan Press, 2024z9780472903733w(DLC) 2023030663