Columbia University Press
China's War on Smuggling
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Philip Thai
About this book
Author / Editor information
Philip Thai (P.h.D., Stanford University) is an Assistant Professor of History at Northeastern University and currently a Henry Luce Foundation/ACLS China Studies Postdoctoral Fellow. He has published articles in Law and History Review, Modern Asian Studies, and Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Cultural Review.Philip Thai is assistant professor of history at Northeastern University.
Reviews
Breaking chronological and geographic conventions, this important book places Nationalist-period state-building and the struggle for sovereignty in a framework of the long-term growth of infrastructural state power in China. By linking the rise of policing, legal regulation of production and consumption, and government intrusion in the economy with the operation of markets and economic life, Philip Thai accomplishes the remarkable feat of a fresh perspective on China from the bottom to top.
Elisabeth Köll, University of Notre Dame:
Philip Thai skillfully explores how smuggling remade the Chinese state by enabling it to establish better protection of its borders and its revenues and by standardizing regulations; he also examines the ways that political and economic disruptions constantly challenged this process. Thai weaves together a creative combination of social, political, economic, and legal history, ranging from a sophisticated technical discussion of tariff autonomy to a clever explication of the visual representation of smuggling in the public imagination of 1930s China. The combination of a broad theme—illicit economic activities interacting with state power—with many smaller case studies of smuggling incidents brings the story alive.
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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List of Maps, Tables, and Figures
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Acknowledgments
xiii -
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INTRODUCTION
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1. COASTAL COMMERCE AND IMPERIAL LEGACIES: Smuggling and Interdiction in the Treaty Port Legal Order
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2. TARIFF AUTONOMY AND ECONOMIC CONTROL: The Intellectual Lineage of the Smuggling Epidemic
59 -
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3. STATE INTERVENTIONS AND LEGAL TRANSFORMATIONS: Asserting Sovereignty in the War on Smuggling
89 -
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4. SHADOW ECONOMIES AND POPULAR ANXIETIES: The Business of Smuggling in Operation and Imagination
119 -
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5. ECONOMIC BLOCKADES AND WARTIME TRAFFICKING: Clandestine Political Economies Under Competing Sovereignties
165 -
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6. STATE REBUILDING AND NEW SMUGGLING GEOGRAPHIES: Restoring and Evading Economic Controls in Civil War China
205 -
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7. OLD MENACE IN NEW CHINA: Symbiotic Economies in the Early People’s Republic
241 -
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CONCLUSION
272 -
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Character List
283 -
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Notes
289 -
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Bibliography
347 -
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Index
367