Contenu du sommaire : Taiwan: The Consolidation of a Democratic and Distinct Society
Revue | China perspectives |
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Numéro | no 2010/3 |
Titre du numéro | Taiwan: The Consolidation of a Democratic and Distinct Society |
Texte intégral en ligne | Accessible sur l'internet |
Taiwan: The Consolidation of a Democratic and Distinct Society
- Editorial - Paul Jobin, Frank Muyard
- Mid-Term Analysis of the Ma Ying-jeou Administration - Frank Muyard Since his election as Taiwan's president in 2008, Ma Ying-jeou has embarked on an active policy of rapprochement with China, leading to the signing of a string of economic and technical agreements with Beijing that have further liberalised and normalised cross-strait economic relations. But the way this rapprochement has been conducted, coupled with the economic crisis that has struck Taiwan for most of the first two years of Ma's administration and a series of missteps and mismanagements by the president and the Kuomintang (KMT) government, have generated a crisis of confidence and widespread discontent among the Taiwanese. This has resulted in consistently low approval ratings and several setbacks in regional and by-elections in 2009 and 2010, as well as the resurgence of a reformed opposition under the leadership of Tsai Ing-wen. The discrepancy between Ma's increasingly apparent Chinese nationalism and the Taiwan-centred national identity of the majority is further indication of a significant disconnect between the KMT administration and the Taiwanese mainstream.
- The New Détente in the Taiwan Strait and Its Impact on Taiwan's Security and Future - Jean-Pierre Cabestan At first glance, the current detente between Beijing and Taipei has been a welcome development for all parties involved in the security of the Taiwan Strait: Taiwan, China, and the United States. However, this is an armed détente in which security issues have yet to be addressed. While accelerated economic integration is allowing China to exert increasing influence over Taiwan, the threat of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) has continued to intensify unabated. Taiwan's defence effort has been stagnating in spite of the recent US package announcement, and Taiwan's will to fight depends more and more directly upon the US commitment to Taiwan's security. This commitment has remained strong. But the PLA's rapid modernisation drive, coupled with China's growing influence over Taiwan, its politicians, its business people, and its society at large, have triggered a new debate in Washington about both the sustainability of the US security commitment, enshrined in the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA), and its very raison d'être. As a result, more questions remain unanswered.
- The Taiwanese Economy After the Miracle - Philippe Chevalérias The Taiwanese economic miracle is over. At the end of the 1980s, changes in macroeconomic conditions forced Taiwanese industry to restructure. While it moved towards information technology, the island became increasingly tied to the mainland. By speeding up the integration of Taiwan with China by means of a China-Taiwan economic zone, President Ma Ying-jeou hopes to restart growth, but the economic and political consequences of the project are causing controversy.
- Hazards and Protest in the “Green Silicon Island” - Paul Jobin This paper presents the struggle of several actors, from environmental NGOs to labour activists, to make industrial hazards more socially visible. After an overview of the key issues in Taiwan's environmental movement since the democratic transition of the mid-1980s, the second part focuses on labour NGOs, an original form of mobilisation pushing for reform of the compensation scheme for occupational hazards. The cases presented cover different industries—including nuclear, chemical, electronics, etc.—various pollutants, and their consequences on public health such as lung diseases diseases and cancers.
- Who Cares for Unions? - Chin-Fen Chang, Heng-Hao Chang This paper studies how the general public in Taiwan evaluates the power of unions and which groups of the population support stronger unionisation. We intend to compare changes in attitudes toward union strength in two ways. First, we examine whether macro-economic or political dynamics created changes in attitudes. Secondly, we analyse the direct effects of four types of independent variables on attitudes toward unions (individual or collective level, short-term or long-term), including gender, age, ethnicity, and education. Using four waves of the Taiwan Social Change Survey conducted between 1990 and 2005, we find that support for stronger unions rose markedly between 2000 and 2005, expressing a higher awareness of the role of unions in labour relations, especially in the context of economic crisis or lower economic growth.
- Taiwanese Historiography - Damien Morier-Genoud Historical studies of Taiwan have been moulded by schools of thought of diverse origins that support divergent and opposing readings of the island's past. The 1990s and the 2000s have seen the emergence of a new scientific history of Taiwan, freed from the patterns of nationalist Chinese historiography. This article focuses on the conditions of elaboration and modalities of writing of this history. It examines in more detail the critical thought and recent work of two Taiwanese historians who seek to grasp, beyond the rigid divisions of political periodisation, certain dynamics of Taiwanese history and invite us to rethink the long-term transition of the island's society towards the modern era.
- History, Identity, and the Politics of Taiwan's Museums - Edwards Vickers Museums in Taiwan—as elsewhere—have always been embroiled in politicised debates over collective identity, both reflecting and helping to shape the contours of identity discourse. During the four decades of the Martial Law era, the Kuomintang (KMT) regime used museums as vehicles for its campaigns to nurture patriotic citizens of a “Republic of China” encompassing the entire Chinese mainland. However, with the onset of democratisation from the late 1980s, museums increasingly reflected and reinforced a strengthening consensus over Taiwan's historical and cultural distinctiveness, while also mirroring the considerable pluralism of popular identity consciousness. This trend was accentuated under the regime of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) after 2000, but 2008 witnessed the return to power of a KMT determined to establish warmer ties with China. This paper examines the extent to which the new regime's more accommodative approach to China has extended into the realm of museums, while considering whether developments within the sector, and within broader Taiwanese society, mean that museums are no longer quite the pliable tools of official cultural policy that they once were.
- Understanding the Nuances of Waishengren - Dominic Meng-Hsuan, Mau-Kuei Chang In the late 1940s and early 50s, the world witnessed a massive wave of political migrants out of Mainland China as a result of the Chinese civil war. Those who sought refuge in Taiwan with the KMT came to be known as the “mainlanders” or “ waishengren.” This paper will provide an overview of the research on waishengrenin the past few decades, outlining various approaches and highlighting specific political and social context that gave rise to these approaches. Finally, it will propose a new research agenda based on a perspective of migration studies and historical/sociological analysis. The new approach argues for the importance of both history and agency in the study of waishengrenin Taiwan.
Article
- The Fiction of Living Beings - Yinde Zhang
Current Affairs
- China Analysis - François Godement, Anne Rulliat The Chinese financial press is euro-pessimist The wave of suicides among Foxconn workers and the vacuity of Chinese trade unionism
- China Analysis - François Godement, Anne Rulliat
Book Reviews
- Wright, Teresa, Accepting Authoritarianism: State-society Relations in China's Reform Era - Edward Friedman
- Charles Horner, Rising China and Its Postmodern Fate: Memories of Empire in a New Global Context - Victoria Tin-bor Hui
- Christine Loh, Underground Front: The Chinese Communist Party in Hong Kong - Jean-Philippe Béja
- Jean-Pierre Cabestan, Tanguy Le Pesant, L'esprit de défense de Taiwan face à la Chine, la jeunesse taïwanaise face à la tentation de la Chine - Benoît Vermander
- Michael Rudolph, Ritual Performances as Authenticating Practices: Cultural representations of Taiwan's aborigines in times of political changes - Benoît Vermander
- Wu Hung, Making History: Wu Hung on Contemporary Art andWu Hung on Contemporary Chinese Artists - Emmanuel Lincot