
Contents
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2.1. Patterns Show Themselves at a Distance 2.1. Patterns Show Themselves at a Distance
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2.2 Climate Change and Violence 2.2 Climate Change and Violence
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2.3. Elite Social Terrain 2.3. Elite Social Terrain
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2.3.1 Elite Data 2.3.1 Elite Data
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2.3.2 Measuring Elite Social Terrain 2.3.2 Measuring Elite Social Terrain
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2.3.3 Star Network 2.3.3 Star Network
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2.3.4 Bowtie Network 2.3.4 Bowtie Network
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2.3.5 Ring Network 2.3.5 Ring Network
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2.4. State Strength 2.4. State Strength
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2.4.1 State Strengthening in the Tang Era 2.4.1 State Strengthening in the Tang Era
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2.4.2 State Maintaining under Song and Ming 2.4.2 State Maintaining under Song and Ming
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2.4.3 State Weakening under Qing 2.4.3 State Weakening under Qing
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2.5. State Form 2.5. State Form
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2.5.1 Ruler-Elite Relations 2.5.1 Ruler-Elite Relations
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2.5.2 State-Society Relations 2.5.2 State-Society Relations
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2.5.3 Durability of Equilibria 2.5.3 Durability of Equilibria
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2.6. Concluding Remarks 2.6. Concluding Remarks
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2 China’s State Development over the Last Two Millennia
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Published:October 2022
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Abstract
This chapter offers an overview of China's state development. It draws attention to an important puzzle in Chinese history that motivates the rest of the book: short-lived emperors often ruled a strong state; long-lasting emperors governed with a weak state. Using analytic narratives and descriptive statistics, the chapter shows a bird's-eye view of China's fiscal and military institutions, external and internal warfare, elite structure, ruler duration, and development of social organizations over a millennium. It reveals that the Chinese elites transitioned from an encompassing interest group with geographically dispersed social relations to a narrow interest group with localized social relations. The chapter also provides an analytic narrative for each of the three phases of China's state development, focusing on how rulers, central elites, and social groups interacted, which generated different equilibrium outcomes for the state and society. It then discusses how China's path of state development differs from Europe's.
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