Title: ❤[READ]❤ Party
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Sinopsis
Richard McGregor's The Party has been established
as the book on China and its political leadership.
It is indispensable to understanding what may
soon become the most powerful country on earth,
and here is it is newly updated to include
material on the once-in-a-decade leadership
changes taking place in November 2012.Newly
updated version including analysis of the
once-in-a-decade leadership changes taking place
in November 2012China's Communist Party is the
largest, most powerful political machine in the
world. Here, Richard McGregor delves deeply into
its inner sanctum, revealing how this secretive
cabal keeps control of every aspect of the
country - its military and media, legal system
and businesses, even its religious
organizations. How has the Party merged Marx, Mao
and the market to create a global superpower?
And what does this mean for the
world?'Extraordinary', Sunday Times'Masterful
... entertaining and insightful',
Economist'Superb ... an essential, riveting
guide to how the rising power really works',
Jonathan Fenby'If you read only one book about
China this year, it should be this one. And if
you do not read this book, you probably do not
understand China today', Arthur Kroeber, China
Economic Quarterly'A compelling exploration of
the world's largest and most successful political
machine', New Statesman'A book that is as
informative as it is entertaining ... China has
been transformed. The system that takes the
credit is brilliantly described by McGregor',
Chris Patten, Financial TimesHaving joined the
Financial Timesin 2000 in Shanghai and being
appointed China
4bureau chief in 2005, Richard McGregor is now
Washington Bureau Chief for the FT. McGregor has
won numerous awards throughout his nearly two
decades of reporting from north Asia, including
a 2010 Society of Publishers in Asia Editorial
Excellence Award for his coverage on the
Xinjiang Riots and 2008 SOPA Awards for Editorial
Intelligence. He has spent twenty years in north
Asia, starting in Taiwan, and then in Tokyo, Hong
Kong and Beijing, where he established offices
for The Australian newspaper. He has also
contributed articles and reports to the BBC, the
International Herald Tribune and the Far Eastern
Economic Review.
5Bestselling new book releases
Party
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Richard McGregor's The Party has been established
as the book on China and its political leadership.
It is indispensable to understanding what may
soon become the most powerful
9country on earth, and here is it is newly updated
to include material on the once-in-a-decade leader
ship changes taking place in November 2012.Newly
updated version including analysis of the
once-in-a-decade leadership changes taking place
in November 2012China's Communist Party is the
largest, most powerful political machine in the
world. Here, Richard McGregor delves deeply into
its inner sanctum, revealing how this secretive
cabal keeps control of every aspect of the
country - its military and media, legal system
and businesses, even its religious
organizations. How has the Party merged Marx, Mao
and the market to create a global superpower?
And what does this mean for the
world?'Extraordinary', Sunday Times'Masterful
... entertaining and insightful',
Economist'Superb ... an essential, riveting
guide to how the rising power really works',
Jonathan Fenby'If you read only one book about
China this year, it should be this one. And if
you do not read this book, you probably do not
understand China today', Arthur Kroeber, China
Economic Quarterly'A compelling exploration of
the world's largest and most successful political
machine', New Statesman'A book that is as
informative as it is entertaining ... China has
been transformed. The system that takes the
credit is brilliantly described by McGregor',
Chris Patten, Financial TimesHaving joined the
Financial Timesin 2000 in Shanghai and being
appointed China bureau chief in 2005, Richard
McGregor is now Washington Bureau Chief for the
FT. McGregor has won numerous awards throughout
his nearly two decades of reporting from north
Asia, including a 2010 Society of Publishers in
Asia Editorial Excellence Award for his coverage
on the Xinjiang Riots and 2008 SOPA Awards for
Editorial Intelligence. He has spent twenty
years in north Asia, starting in Taiwan, and then
in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Beijing, where he
established offices for The Australian newspaper.
He has also contributed articles and reports to
the BBC, the International Herald Tribune and the
Far Eastern
10Economic Review.