Physical and digital books, media, journals, archives, and databases.
Results include
  1. Conflicting counsels to confuse the age : a documentary study of political economy in Qing China, 1644-1840

    Dunstan, Helen
    1st ed. - Ann Arbor : Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan, 1996.

    Online University of Michigan Press

  2. State or merchant? : political economy and political process in 1740s China

    Dunstan, Helen
    Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Asia Center, 2006.

    What did it mean to run a large, commercialized agrarian polity according to the best Confucian principles? The author investigates the scope and limits of belief in market forces among those critical of government intervention, establishing that economic arguments for state withdrawal from the grain trade were available by 1750.

    Online EBSCO Academic Comprehensive Collection

  3. State or merchant? : political economy and political process in 1740s China

    Dunstan, Helen
    Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Asia Center, 2006.

    What did it mean to run a large, commercialized agrarian polity according to the best Confucian principles? This book is intended as a contribution to both intellectual and political history. It is partly a study of how Confucian-trained officials thought about the grain trade and the state's role in it, particularly the "ever-normal granaries", the stockpiles of grain maintained by every county government as protection against shortages and high prices. The author investigates the scope and limits of belief in market forces among those critical of government intervention, establishing that rudimentary economic arguments for state withdrawal from the grain trade were available by 1750. She then explores challenges, from within the ruling apparatus, to the state's claim that its own stockpiling served the public interest, as well as the factors behind decisions in the mid- and late 1740s to suspend or decrease state purchases of grain. As a study of Confucian government in action, this book describes a mode of public policy discussion far less dominated by the Confucian scriptures than one might expect. As a contribution to intellectual history, the work offers a detailed view of members of an ostensibly Confucian government pursuing divergent agendas around the question of "state or merchant?".

    Online Harvard University Asia Center E-Book Collection

Guides

Course- and topic-based guides to collections, tools, and services.
No guide results found... Try a different search

Library website

Library info; guides & content by subject specialists
No website results found... Try a different search

Exhibits

Digital showcases for research and teaching.
No exhibits results found... Try a different search

EarthWorks

Geospatial content, including GIS datasets, digitized maps, and census data.
No earthworks results found... Try a different search

More search tools

Tools to help you discover resources at Stanford and beyond.