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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 9 page research paper that contrasts the political systems, political culture and policy making within China and India. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KL9_khindochina.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in terms of infrastructure, demography, and their standard of living in order to maintain a steady increase in their level of prosperity during the coming decades (Docksai, 2012). While
these two countries similar economically and demographically, in that they are first and second in the world in regards to population size, they are also very different as India is
a democracy and China is Communist, with political power tightly controlled by the Communist Party. Buffered by Tibet and the Himalayas, relations between China and India have often been turbulent,
with a brief, but full scale, war breaking out in 1962 (Malik, 2012). Considering that each of these countries is considered to be an up-and-coming major economic player on the
world stage, it is informative to examine political systems, cultures and overall socialization process in regards to political orientation in order to evaluate possible scenarios for their future. Political
Systems Traditionally, Western studies of Chinese culture have taken the stance that its culture cannot be understood unless it is considered on its terms. In other words, China is
considered so drastically different from the West that it must be viewed as a unique discipline (Moody, 2009). Chinese scholars are in agreement that the Opium war of the nineteenth
century was an important turning point for Chinese history, as this event forced the incorporation of China within the world system of that era (Moody, 2009). Within this new international
context, Chinese high culture was ultimately viewed as anachronistic by younger generations who began to see the Chinese veneration of culture of being itself a problem that needed to be
addressed for the country to progress. This perception eventually led to the emergence of the Communist Party, which ended the Chinas history as a dynastic empire and marked its beginning
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