COURSE OUTLINE
Section I:
Conceptualizing Science, Technology and Development
1. Science and Technology:
Some Fundamental Issues of Nature and Categories
2. Social Studies of S&T: A
Multidisciplinary Approach; History, Philosophy and Sociology of
Science
3. Development: Various Theories;
Modernization, Dependency and East Asian Model
4. Linkages between Science, Technology
and Development
Section II: Science,
Technology
and Development in Chinese
History and Perception
Three Models: Classical, Western and Socialist
Chinese Perspectives on Science, Technology and Development
Section
III:
Science
and
Technology
in China's
Development since
1978
1.
Science and Technology in China’s
Development: A Framework for Analysis
2.
Reforms in S&T Organizational Structure, R&D and Innovation
3. Science and Technology in Chinese
Agriculture (Biotechnology, GM Crops& Foods)
4. Science and Technology in Industrial
Development (Turnkey, Tech in SOEs & High tech)
5. Science, Technology and Defence
Modernization
6. Technology Acquisition: Advanced
Technology for Domestic Development
7. S&T byproducts: ICTs
8. S&T and Energy Security
9. S&T and Environment
10. Science and Politics: Some Debates
Reading List:
Readings with *
are essential while the rest are additional.
Section I:
Conceptualizing Science, Technology and Development
Jasanoff, S.,
Markle G., Peterson J. and Pinch T., ed., Handbook of Science
and Technology Studies (Thousand Oaks, CA.: Sage Publications,
1995).* Read chapters1 and 5.
Kuhn, Thomas,
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Second Edition,
Enlarged (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1970). *
Barber, Bernard,
Sociology of Science (New York: Free Press, 1962). *
Feyerbend, Paul,
Science in a Free Society (London: Verso, 1978). *
Sagasti, Francisco,
“Underdevelopment, Science and Technology: The Point of View of
the Underdeveloped Countries”, Science Studies, Vol.3,
No.1, 1973, pp. 47-59. *
Stewart, Frances,
Technology and Underdevelopment (London: Palgrave
Macmillan, 1978).
Salomon, J. J.,
Sagasti, F. R. and Sachs-Jeantet C., The Uncertain Quest:
Science, Technology and Development (Tokyo: UNU Press, 1994).
* Read Introduction.
Potter, Robert B.
“Theories, Strategies and Ideologies of Development”, in Vandana
Desai and Robert B. Potter, The Companion to Development
Studies, (London: Arnold Publishers, 2002) pp. 62-64. *
Apter, David E.,
Rethinking Development: Modernization, Dependency, and Postmodern
Politics (London: Sage Publications, 1987). *
Escobar, Arturo,
Encountering Development: The Making and Unmaking of the Third
World (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995).
Section II:
Science, Technology and Development in Chinese History, and
Perception
Needham, Joseph,
Science and Civilisation in China Vol.1 (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1956). *
Blue, Gregory, “Science(s),
Civilizations, Historie(s): A Continuing Dialogue with Joseph
Needham”, and Elzinga, Aant, “Revisiting the Needhamian Paradox”
in S. Irfan Habib and Dhruv Raina, eds., Situating the History
of Science: Dialogues with Joseph Needham (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1999), 29-72. *
Nakayama, S.,
“Science and Technology in China” in Toynbee, Arnold, ed., Half
the World: The History and Culture of China and Japan (London:
Thames and Hudson, 1973), pp. 141-150. *
Sivin Nathan. “Why
the Scientific Revolution Did Not Take Place in China -Or Didn't
It? In Sivin, Science in Ancient China, (Aldershot, Hants:
Variorum, 1995). *
Sivin, Nathan “On
the Limits of Empirical Knowledge in Chinese and Western Science”
See his website for the article.
Kirby, William C.,
“Technocratic Organization and Technological Development in China:
The Nationalist Experience and Legacy, 1928-1953” in Simon, Denis
Fred and Goldman, Merle, eds., Science and Technology in
Post-Mao China. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989),
pp. 23-43. *
Shih, Joseph,
“Science and Technology in China,” Asian Survey, Vol. 12,
No. 8, August 1972, pp. 662-675. *
Suttmeier, Richard
P., Research and Revolution: Science Policy and Social Change
in China (London: Lexington Books, 1974).
Section III. 1
S &T in China’s Development since 1978: A Framework for Analysis
Deng, Xiaoping,
Speech at the Opening Ceremony of the National Conference on
Science, 18 March 1978. *
Guide to China’s
Science and Technology Policy, White Paper on Science and
Technology No. 1, 1986, State Science and Technology
Commission, (SSTC), People’s Republic of China (PRC) 1986.
Suttmeier, Richard
P., Science and Technology and China's Drive for Modernization
(California: Hoover, 1980).
Simon, Denis Fred,
“China's Drive to Close the Technological Gap: S&T Reform the
Imperative to Catch up,” China Quarterly, September 1989,
No. 719, pp. 598-631. *
Shulin Gu, “Science
and Technology for Development: China’s Experience in the Second
Half of the Twentieth Century”, Science, Technology and Society
Vol.6, No. 1, 2001, pp. 203-34. *
Xiobai Shen and
Robin Williams, “A Critique of China’s Utilitarian View of Science
and Technology” Science, Technology & Society, Vol. 10, No.
2, 2005, pp. 197-223. *
Section III. 2
Reforms in S&T Organizational Structure, R&D and Innovation
Zhou, Chengkui,
“Revamping Science and Technology System,” Beijing Review,
Vol. 29, No. 24, 16 June 1986, pp. 21-27.
Saich, Tony,
“Reform of the China’s Organizational System,” in Simon, Denis
Fred and Goldman, Merle, eds., Science and Technology in
Post-Mao China. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989),
pp. 69-88. *
Baark, Erik,
“Fragmented Innovation: China’s Science and Technology Policy
Reforms in Retrospect,” in China’s Economic Dilemmas in the
1990s: The Problem of Reforms, Modernization, and Interdependence,
Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States, (Armonk:
ME Sharpe, 1994), pp. 531-545. *
Conroy, Richard,
“China’s Science and Technology Policy” in Cheng, Joseph Y. S.,
ed., China: Modernization in the 1980s (Hong Kong: Chinese
University Press, 1989), pp. 495-552.
Simon, Denis Fred,
“Rethinking R&D “The China Business Review, July -Aug 1983,
Vol. 10, No. 4, pp. 25-28. *
Section III. 3
Science and Technology in Chinese Agriculture
Fan, Shenggen
(1991), ‘Effects of Technological Change and Institutional Reform
on Production Growth in Chinese Agriculture,’ American Journal
of Agricultural Economics, 73: (2), pp, 266-275. *
Bruce Stone, “Basic
Agricultural Technology under Reform”, in Y. Y. Kueh and Robert F.
Ash, ed., Economic Trends in Chinese Agriculture: The Impact of
Post Mao Reforms (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993) pp. 334. *
Wang, Sangui
(1995-96), ‘The Diffusion of Agricultural Technology in Poor Areas
of South -West China: The Role of Farmer’s Organizations and
Village Governments’, China Information, 10 (3 & 4), pp.
154-55.
Zhang, Xiaobo and
Wang, Qin (2001), ‘Challenges in Reforming the Agricultural R&D
System: The Case of Jiangsu Province,’ Conference Report 11. *
Section III. 4
Science and Technology in Industrial Development
Maruyama, Nobuo,
Industrialization and Technological Development in China
(Tokyo: Institute of Developing Economies, 1990). *
Grow, Roy F., “In
Search of Excellence in China’s Industrial Sector: The Chinese
Enterprises and Foreign Technology” in China’s Economic
Dilemmas in the 1990s: The Problems of Reforms, Modernization, and
Interdependence Vol. 2, Joint Economic Committee, Congress of
the United States (Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1994), pp. 817-827.
Conroy, R. J.,
“Technological Innovation in China's Recent Industrialization,”
The China Quarterly, No. 97, March. 1984, pp. 1-23. *
Qin, Shijien, “High
-Tech Industrialization in China. An Analysis of the Current
Status,” Asian Survey, Vol. XXXII, No. 12, December 1992,
pp. 1124-1136. *
Section III. 5
Science, Technology and Defence Modernization
Gurtov, Mel,
“Swords into Market Shares: China’s Conversion of Military
Industry to Civilian Production,” The China Quarterly, No.
134 (June 1993), pp. 213-241. *
Tow, William T.,
“Science and Technology in China’s Defense,” Problems of
Communism (July/August 1985). *
Frieman, Wendy,
“China’s Military R&D System: Reform and Reorientation,” in Denis
Fred Simon and Merle Goldman, eds., Science and Technology in
Post-Mao China (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989),
pp. 251-286. *
Section III. 6
Technology Acquisition: Advanced Technology for Domestic Development
Simon, Denis Fred,
“China’s Acquisition and Assimilation of Foreign Technology:
Beijing’s Search for Excellence” in China’s Economic Dilemma’s
in the 1990s: The Problems of Reforms, Modernization, and
Interdependence Vol. 2, Joint Economic Committee, Congress of
the United States (Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 1994), pp. 565-598. *
Ho, Samuel P. S.,
“Technology Transfer to China during the 1980s-How Effective: Some
Evidence from Jiangsu,” Pacific Affairs (Vancouver), Vol.
70, No. 1, Spring 1997, pp. 85-106. *
Zhao, Hongxin,
“Technology Imports and Their Impacts on the Enhancement of
China’s Indigenous Technological Capability,” The Journal of
Development Studies, (London), Vol. 31, No. 4, April 1995, pp.
585-602. *
Section III. 7 S&T
byproducts: ICTs
Hughes, Christopher
R., “Review Essay: China and the Internet: A Question of Politics
or Management?”, The China Quarterly, No. 175, September
2003, pp. 818-824. *
Tipson, Frederick
S., “China and the Information Revolution”, in Elizabeth Economy
and Michel Oksenberg, eds., China Joins the World: Progress and
Prospects (New York: Council on Foreign Affairs Relations
Press, 1999), pp. 231-265. *
Mengin, Francoise,
ed., Cyber China: Reshaping National Identities in the Age of
Information (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004). Read
particularly chapters one and three. *
Section III. 8
S&T and Energy Security
Ross, Marc,
“Improving the Efficiency of Energy in Manufacturing”, Science,
21 April, 1989, pp. 311-317. *
Smil, Vaclav,
“China’s Energy and Resources Uses: Continuity and Change”, The
China Quarterly, No. 156, December 1998, pp. 935-951. *
Sinton, Jonathan E.
and et al, Evaluation of China’s Energy Strategy Options,
Report prepared for China Sustainable Energy Programme, 16 May
2005. *
Section III. 9 S&T
and Environment
Levine, Candice,
“Reorienting for Sustainable Development: Support for a National
Science and Technology Policy”, Journal of International
Affairs, Spring 1998, Vol.51, No.2, 1998, pp. 675-688. *
Economy, Elizabeth,
The River Runs Black: The Environmental Challenge to China’s
Future (Ithaca, NY and London: Cornell University Press,
2004). *
Morton, Catherine,
International Aid and China’s Environment: Taming the Yellow
Dragon (London: Routledge, 2005). *
Section III. 10
Science and Politics: Some Debates
Simon, Denis Fred,
“China's S&T Intellectuals in the Post-Mao Era: “Retrospective and
Prospective Glimpse,” Journal of North East Asian Studies.
Summer, 1985, pp. 57-82.
Suttmeier, Richard
P., “Science, Technology and China’s Political Future: A Framework
for Analysis,” Simon, Denis Fred and Goldman, Merle, eds.,
Science and Technology in Post-Mao China. (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1989), pp.375-396. *
Buckly,
Christopher, “Science As Politics and Politics As Science: Fang
Lizhi and Chinese Intellectuals’ Uncertain Road to Dissent,”
Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs, November 1990 pp.
36-58. *
Miller, Lyman H.,
Science and Dissent in Post-Mao China (Seattle: University
of Washington Press, 1996). *
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