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中国读本丛书-民主是个好东西:中国民主是怎样的民主(英)

中国读本丛书-民主是个好东西:中国民主是怎样的民主(英)

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  • ISBN:9787508546674
  • 装帧:一般纯质纸
  • 册数:暂无
  • 重量:暂无
  • 开本:16开
  • 页数:240
  • 出版时间:2021-06-01
  • 条形码:9787508546674 ; 978-7-5085-4667-4

本书特色

“中国读本”丛书,以让世界更好地读懂中国为出发点,重点向国外读者介绍中国道路、中国理论、中国制度和中国实践。 The “Reading China” series focuses on introducing China’s path, theory, system and practice to foreign readers, with the purpose of enabling the world to better understand China.

内容简介

本书从历史与世界两个维度,对中国的民主进行了全面、客观的介绍,递进式地讲述了中国何以会有这样的民主、中国的民主是怎样的民主、为什么中国的民主模式越来越有吸引力等内容,讲清了中国民主的历史基础与现实取向、中国民主的特色与优势。

目录

Chapter One  Why Must the Path to Democracy Fit the Country’s Realities?
The Western Path to Democracy Does Not Work in China
Embarking on a New Path of People’s Democracy
Copying Other Countries’ Democratic Models is Bound to Fail
Chapter Two  Why Did China Choose the People’s Congress System Instead of the Bicameral System Implemented in Western Countries?
The Formation of the “Unicameral System” with Chinese Characteristics
The People’s Congress is Different from the Western Parliament
The Operational Mechanism of China’s Supreme Body of State Power
Chapter Three  Why Do We Say that China’s Political Party System is Neither a One-party System nor a Western Multi-party System?
China’s Choice of Political Party System Model
Features of China’s New Type of Political Party System
Advantages of China’s New Type of Political Party System
China’s Political Party System is a Model of Success
Chapter Four  Why Does China Adopt Consultative Democracy Rather Than Confrontational Democracy?
Drawbacks of Confrontational Democracy
Bright Future of Consultative Democracy
Diverse Practice of Consultative Democracy
The New World Order Can Only Be Based on Consultation
Chapter Five  How Are Chinese Leaders Selected and Elected?
Criteria for Growing into a Chinese Leader
Leadership Candidacy
Election of Leaders
Chapter Six  How Do the Electoral System and the Grassroots Democracy Operate in China?
Multi-Level Electoral System
Grassroots Democracy in China’s Rural Areas
Democracy in China’s Urban Communities
The System of the Congress of Workers and Staff in China
Chapter Seven  Why Do We Say that China Has Paved a Path of Human Rights Development Suited to Its National Conditions?
China’s Human Rights Perspective
China’s Historic Progress in Human Rights
Protecting the Rights of Special Groups
Promoting the Common Development of the International Cause of Human Rights
Chapter Eight  Why Do We Say that People’s Democracy Has Been Embedded in the Modern National Governance Process of China?
The Democratic Rule by the CPC
Government Democracy in China
Judicial Democracy in China
Social Governance Democracy
Chapter Nine  Why is China’s Democratic Model Increasingly Attractive?
The Democratic Model of China Can Assure the Country’s Stability
The Democratic Model of China Can Ignite the People’s Enthusiasm to Participate in National Development
The Democratic Model of China Can Promote the Catch-up of Socio-Economic Development
The Democratic Model of China Can Promote the Close Unity among the People
The Democratic Model of China Can Better People’s Life
The Democratic Model of China Can Coordinate All Efforts to Complete Key National Undertakings
展开全部

节选

China, a major country with over 5000 years of civilization, has made significant contributions to human development and progress. In the 19th century, China saw a decline in its agricultural civilization and its system of feudal autocracy that had lasted for thousands of years had ossified, so the development of Chinese society was at a standstill. Although China then was still a “big oriental country” and the richest in the world, crisis lurked in all corners at the time. The Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) that was ruling China was politically corrupt. Its armaments were abolished, and finances were tight. During the same period, some European and American countries established advanced social systems and modes of production through bourgeois and industrial revolutions. In order to grab greater benefits, Western powers turned their attention towards the rest of the world for crazy overseas expansion and colonial plunder. China, with its vast territory and abundant resources, naturally became their coveted target. In 1840, the British colonists opened the closed gate of the Qing Empire with their powerful ships and guns and dumped opium on a large scale. The First Opium War (1840-42) broke out. In August 1842, the defeated Qing government was forced to sign the first unequal treaty of national betrayal and humiliation with the British government. As more Western powers intruded in, the Qing government was forced to sign one unequal treaty after another, which severely damaged China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. According to incomplete statistics, more than 400 unequal treaties were signed by the Qing government with foreign powers in modern times. Invaded by external imperialism and oppressed by internal feudal despotism, the Chinese nation plunged into danger, and its people had no democratic rights at all. Generations of Chinese people rose up and fought courageously and unyieldingly in order to change the destiny of the country and the nation. During the National Salvation Movement, some advanced Chinese, who turned to the West for finding a way to save the country and the people, once promoted the bourgeois reform movement and launched the bourgeois-democratic revolution in China. Facing the old China with internal disturbance and foreign aggression, the Chinese people had gradually formed a consensus: To save the country, China must reform; to reform, China must learn from progressive countries. At that time, only Western capitalist countries were progressive because they had successfully built themselves into bourgeois countries. Another important reason for choosing to learn from the West was that Japan had become a powerful country through the Meiji Restoration. The success of the Japanese in learning from the West inspired the enthusiasm of the Chinese to learn from the West. Under such historical conditions, the reform ideas of the bourgeoisie spread rapidly, which gradually formed an ideological trend of reform, and developed into a political movement of the Hundred Days Reform.

作者简介

陈坚:现任中央党史和文献研究院研究员,先后发表《从新时期党代会报告看中共民主观的演变》《执政党党内民主与构建社会主义和谐社会》《改革开放以来我国政府机构改革历程述略》《党的代表大会由年会制到常任制的演变及其试点模式》《党的群众路线形成与发展》《改革开放与党的自我革命》等100余篇文章;出版《中国民主政治的走向》《民主监督——中国共产党理论与实践》、《群众路线与党内教育活动》《人民至上》《毛泽东的1949》《当代中国政治》《自我革命:中国改革开放成功的政治密码》等10余部著作。 Chen Jian He is a researcher at Central Institute of Party’s History and Literature. He has published more than 100 articles, including “The Development of the CPC’s Democracy Outlook from the Party Congress Report in the New Period”, “The Ruling Party’s Intra-Party Democracy and the Building of a Harmonious Socialist Society”, “An Overview of Chinese Government Institutional Reform since the Reform and Opening Up”, “The Evolution of the Party Congress from the System of Annual Sessions to the System with a Fixed Term and its Pilot Model”, “The Formation and Development of the Party’ s Mass Line”, and “Self Revolution of the Communist Party of China and the Reform and Opening Up”. He is also the author of more than ten books, including The Future of China’s Demo c r a c y , Demo c r a t i c Supervision: The CPC’s Theory and Practice, The Mass Line and Intra-Party Educational Activities, People First, Mao Zedong’s 1949, Contemporary Chinese Politics, and Self Revolution of the Communist Party of China:The Political Key to the Success of China’s Reform and Opening Up.

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