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001 | 6121213593621 | ||
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005 | 20190211161630.0 | ||
008 | 061212s1996 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d | ||
100 | 1 |
_aBOISOT, Max _928985 |
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245 | 1 | 0 |
_aFrom fiefs to clans and network capitalism : _bexplaining China's emerging economic order |
260 |
_aIthaca : _bJohnson Graduate School of Management, _cDecember 1996 |
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520 | 3 | _aChina's rapid economic development is being accomplished through a system of industrial governance and transaction that differs from Western experience. Here we identify the broad institutional nature of this distinctiveness within a framework of information codification and diffucion. The emergent features of China's economic order are analysed with reference to the business system developing there, in particular, the nature of market arrangements, the form of capitalism, and the role of government within that system. The limited extent of codification of information in China and its communal property rights and organization of economic transactions suggest that decentralisation from the former state-command system is giving rise to a distinctive institutional form - network capitalism | |
700 | 1 |
_aCHILD, John _92177 |
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773 | 0 | 8 |
_tAdministrative Science Quarterly _g41, 4, p. 600-628 _dIthaca : Johnson Graduate School of Management, December 1996 _xISSN 00018392 _w |
942 | _cS | ||
998 |
_a20061212 _b1359^b _cNatália |
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998 |
_a20101108 _b1556^b _cCarolina |
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999 |
_aConvertido do Formato PHL _bPHL2MARC21 1.1 _c20608 _d20608 |
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041 | _aeng |