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The Transformation of Rural China
by Jonathan Unger
Edition: M.E.Sharpe; (February 2002)

Jonathan Unger, a highly regarded China scholar from Australia, has been studying rural China for 3 decades. In the 1970s, when most scholars were prevented from doing true fieldwork in the PRC,

Unger and colleagues interviewed recent Hong Kong migrants from a particular village in Guangdong province, and produced the excellent village study ´´Chen Village´´ (later updated to include the Deng era). In the 1980s and 1990s, he started making regular extensive trips around the Chinese countryside talking to farmers, rural workers, officials, etc. ´´The Transformation of Rural China´´ is a collection of Unger´s essays covering this entire span, all updated and with extensive references to other scholars´ work.

The first 90 pages of this 250 page book are about the Mao era. There are essays on the state´s power at the village level, the rural class structure, ideology and work incentives, and the Cultural Revolution. One point that hasn´t been made by many others is that the peasants were not opposed to collective farming per se, what they resented was the lack of economic freedom given the collectives. The state´s sometimes irrational restrictions on what the village collectives could do (what to plant, how to plant it, how to divide income among villagers, how to market the output), and the unfairly low prices paid for the village´s output all contributed to rising disillusionment with the Maoist rural development model.

The rest of the book is about the reform era. First is an article on the early 1980s decollectivization. Unger´s interviews undermine the ´´voting with feet´´ explanation offered by the regime and accepted uncritically by most western observers. Decollectivization was mostly a top-down, non-spontaneous, involuntary affair. This is not to say it wasn´t welcomed, just that farmers had little to do with it. Most villages seem to have preferred the new decentralized family managed co-op system, yet a minority of villages that preferred to keep the collective farms crumbled under fierce state pressure.



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