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Chinese Law & Government
Editor: James Tong, University of California, Los Angeles ( tong@polisci.sscnet.ucla.edu)
Chinese Law and Government offers a rare window on the inner workings of Chinese politics and governance through careful selection, translation, and annotation of primary documents, analytical studies, and other authoritative sources. The materials translated for publication in the journal's thematic issues and series may be laws, regulations, court records, policy directives, and published or unpublished, official or scholarly reports and analyses of critical questions. Insight into the significance of the topic and the content of each issue is provided in a substantive introduction by the editor or expert guest editor. "Critically important ... for any research library with an interest in Chinese affairs." -Magazines for Libraries "The translations are accurate, free of any tampering or bias. The selection seems objective, and an effort is made to devote a given issue to a central problem. The emphasis is on translation of material which has lasting value for research." -Library Journal
Abstracting and Indexing: The articles in this journal are indexed/abstracted in Bibliography of Asian Studies Online, International Bibliography of Periodical Literature on the Humanities and Social Sciences (IBZ), Journal Citation Report/Social Sciences Edition, Scopus, Social Sciences Citation Index, Social Scisearch, and Wilson Social Sciences Index.
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ISSN: |
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0009-4609
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Vol. 42 (Jan/Feb 2009 - Nov/Dec 2009)
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6
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U.S. Individual Subscription Rate: $149.00 |
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U.S. Institutional Subscription Rate: $1335.00 |
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Foreign Individual Subscription Rate: $221.00 |
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Foreign Institutional Subscription Rate: $1455.00 |
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Editorial Board
Thomas P. Bernstein, Columbia University; Parris H. Chang, Pennsylvania State University; Jerome A. Cohen, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton and Garrison; Chalmers Johnson, Japan Policy Research Institute; Michael Y.M. Kau, Brown University; John W. Lewis, Stanford University; Victor Li, East-West Center; John T. Ma, New York Public Library; James D. Seymour, Columbia University; Ezra F. Vogel, Harvard University
Table of Contents
September-October 2009
Vol.
42
No.
05
| People's Liberation Army Documents on the Sino-Vietnamese Conflict, 1979 (I) | | Guest Editor's Introduction | | EDWARD C. O'DOWD | 3 | | 1. Main Experiences Gained by the XX Army During the Counterattack in Self-Defense Against Vietnam, Part 1 | | | | | 11 | | 2. Main Experiences Gained by the XX Army During the Counterattack in Self-Defense Against Vietnam, Part 2 | | | | | 32 | | 3. Main Experiences Gained by the No. XXX Division During the Counterattack in Self-Defense Against Vietnam | | | | | 54 | | 4. Combat Report of the XX Army Artillery Forces on the Counterattack in Self-Defense | | | | | 71 | | 5. Combat Report of the XX Division's Artillery | | | | | 93 |
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