中华人民共和国现行法律法规汇编及司法解释全书:2005最新版,刑事卷

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作   者:熊建华,苏志强,王健康主编

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ISBN:9787888334281

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简介

One of the most striking phenomena in the recent history of China is the large number of Chinese youths who went abroad to study. Each year, from the beginning of this century, hun- dreds and then thousands of young men and women broke away from the confines of their own culture and immersed themselves for a few years of study in the modernizing worlds of Japan, the United States,Western Europe, and Russia. Most of the nation's leaders during the twentieth century had this experience, or at least learned from teachers who had studied abroad. This group of leaders was the driving force in nearly every aspect of the multifaceted process of China's modernization--military, technological, scientific, diplomatic,financial, political, ideological, and literary. Study abroad was also part of the process through which the Chinese began to adjust to the realities of the world outside the Middle Kingdom. Without takinginto account this phenomenon of Western education, modern China is incomprehensible.Yet, strange to say, until the publication of the present book, there has been no comprehensive and systematic study in a Western language of this aspect of China's recent history. Professor Y. C. Wang has explored the subject intensively, if not exhaustively, using a formidable array of historical data to trace the movement fromthe closing decades of the nineteenth century to mid-point in the twentieth.During these seven or eight decades, about one hundred thousand students went abroad for extended periods. Most returned to Chinaeager to use their knowledge to contribute to the country's social transformation. Some had distinguished careers and some were misfits. Some used their knowledge for personal aggrandizement. What effect did they have upon their own society? To bring coherence to a subject of such complexity, Professor Wang has used a variety of approaches--socio-historical, statistical, descriptive, and biographic.He has explored many neglected aspects of China's modern history in which the foreign educated were leaders of political revolution,guides to social reform, managers of the country's finances, ideologists, cultural leaders, and entrepreneurs. Finally, he has tried to appraise the impact upon China of this massive drive for foreign education.If some of his conclusions are pessimistic, this may not be inap- propriate in view of the agonizing cultural readjustment China has gone through in the twentieth century. Leaders with part of theireducation acquired abroad were unable to prevent this cultural confusion; indeed, they contributed to it. On the whole, theyneglected the problems of rural China where most of the population lived. Was this the fault, or at least the result, of their foreign edu-cation? Was this education, generally speaking, ill-suited to China'sneeds? Was the turmoil an inevitable by-product of modernization?Japan seems not to have suffered so traumatic an experience. What other factors bore upon the Chinese case? These are some of the questions to which Professor Wang addresses himself.Questions such as these have an import far beyond China. Most of the world is undergoing a process of modernization disruptive of established mores and attended by conflict. Thousands of young men and women from Asia and Africa are studying today in foreign countries--in America, Western Europe, Russia, and now in China--seeking eagerly to enhance their own knowledge with the hope of contributing to the modernization of their own societies. Will their education abroad, and the conflicting ideologies various of them mayabsorb, serve them and their nations well or ill? Must the transplanta-tion of knowledge, belief, and technical skill create social confusion?American youths, too, are studying abroad in ever-increasing numbers.What judgments will future historians come to in appraising theinter-cultural education which so many of the world's future leadersare experiencing?Professor Wang's study of the Chinese historical case does notattempt to answer these latter questions. For this he may surely be forgiven, since he has pioneered in one important field affecting something like a fifth of the human race. But certainly his book has much to say not only to students of China but also to those concerned with education in the modern world.C. MARTIN WILBURProfessor of Chinese HistoryColumbia UniversityOctober, 1965

目录


目录开心策划挖个坑,把圣诞老人埋了倒霉人的圣诞遭遇  
圣诞夜里的搞怪事件  
真不是时候  
郁闷开心过圣诞  
漂亮女友的圣诞笑事  
开心·COM上QQ难免遇到的事/品妮
可乐阵线联盟怪味校园  
狗尾续貂不会有重名
关于恐怖马桶的声明
开心一刻  
鬼马女生  
鬼马男生  
鬼头鬼脑  
名人出马  
登鼻子上脸
牛头马面  
牛皮吹吧  
另类制作  
风吹老外  
说来话长  
鬼话连篇  
卡漫永远OK小野人/刘仲良
成语歪解/蔡子君
番薯兄弟连/刘滨
唐伯虎点秋香/秕谷子
动物什锦糖/柳宁
民间笑话  
奇闻博览  
爆笑QQ资料
鬼马剧场昨天,今天,明天/新鲜旧情人
心理游戏秀到底12星座被路边石头绊倒时
笑说傻郭靖/丁雯
西行唐僧桃花运之舞台版/晓月
秀逗青春“咬”住帅草不松口/裴金莹
我和教官的私人恩怨/金薇  
笑熬浆糊滥竽充数/咸蛋超银  
牛郎要告王母状/陆天伦  
玩得绝对心跳主持人寄语
杞人忧天之旧闻调查
擂台闯关连环套
大头捕快之传奇色彩篇
脚下抹油之尴尬现场
心声心递逗逗信箱

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