27.01.2026 BCCN & LMRG Lecture: Reputation Collectives: The Allure of Modernization: Guizhou’s Shift from Inclusive Development to Indebted Growth
- https://www.iaaw.hu-berlin.de/de/ostasien/neuigkeiten/aktuelle-termine/27-01-2026-bccn-lecture-reputation-collectives-the-allure-of-modernization-guizhous-shift-from-inclusive-development-to-indebted-growth
- 27.01.2026 BCCN & LMRG Lecture: Reputation Collectives: The Allure of Modernization: Guizhou’s Shift from Inclusive Development to Indebted Growth
- 2026-01-27T17:00:00+01:00
- 2026-01-27T18:30:00+01:00
- Wann 27.01.2026 von 17:00 bis 18:30
- Wo Seminar für Ostasienstudien, Raum 201
- Name des Kontakts Merle Groneweg
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Under what conditions will leaders of a developing economy resist dominant ideologies of modernization and development? If modernization implies maximizing GDP growth through urbanization, high-tech industry, and large-scale production, then Guizhou province in China once charted an opposing path. For more than two decades beginning in the mid-1980s, Guizhou prioritized rural-based development, that is, investing in infrastructure and livelihood opportunities that directly benefited the rural poor. Consequently, despite posting China's slowest GDP growth, the province achieved faster poverty reduction and rural income gains than many of its faster-growing neighbors. Yet by 2010, a new provincial regime embraced a mainstream modernization agenda centered on large-scale infrastructure and high-tech industries, especially big data. As a result, although GDP growth accelerated, poverty alleviation and rural income gains lagged, while Guizhou became China's most indebted province. Drawing on fieldwork conducted between 2002 and 2025, John A. Donaldson analyzes the dialectical political forces and outcomes of these two divergent strategies, thereby highlighting the trade-offs between growth-centered modernization and more inclusive, rural-based development. He then exemplifies how this "Guizhou model" has been applied in other contexts, examining cases from countries ranging from Switzerland and Scotland to Costa Rica, Colombia, Chicago, and Hong Kong.
Bio:
John A. Donaldson is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the School of Social Sciences, Singapore Management University (SMU). He researches on politics, rural development and poverty in China and elsewhere, having conducted extensive fieldwork in rural India and Thailand, as well as in Singapore.
John Donaldson is the author of Small Works: Poverty and Economic Development in Southwestern China (Cornell University Press, 2011). His research has also been published in journals such as World Development, Journal of Development Studies, International Studies Quarterly, Politics and Society, China Journal, China Quarterly and Journal of Contemporary Asia.
