03611oam 22007094 450 991013635250332120250818145524.097808223745890822374587(CKB)3710000000615069(SSID)ssj0001613947(PQKBManifestationID)16341856(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001613947(PQKBWorkID)14671796(PQKB)10974879(MiAaPQ)EBC4522495(OCoLC)936814218936814218(OCoLC)1111384040(MdBmJHUP)muse73634(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/38301(ODN)ODN0011133868(Perlego)1465862(oapen)doab38301(EXLCZ)99371000000061506920160205d2016 uy 0engurcn#nnn|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDiaspora and trust Cuba, Mexico, and the rise of China /Adrian H. HearnDurham NCDuke University Press2016Durham :Duke University Press,2016.1 online resource (xi, 266 pages) ill0-8223-6057-8 0-8223-6073-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Cuba, China, and the long march to the market -- Mexico, China, and the politics of trust -- Havana's Chinatown and the quest for synergy -- Trust and treachery in Mexico's Chinese diaspora -- China and the future of history.Diaspora and Trust charts changing Sino-Latin relations at the outset of the 21st century. Combining political-economic analysis with ethnography, the book examines the responses of Cuba and Mexico to China's growing global influence. Despite opposite economic policy orientations, neither Latin American country has successfully adapted to new conditions of cooperation and competition with China. Furthermore, Cuba and Mexico both struggle with uncertain relationships to the Chinese diaspora communities within their borders. TRUST AND DIASPORA draws on fieldwork in all three countries, providing a rich account of personal experiences at the intersection of global and local affairs. In the process, author Adrian H. Hearn advocates a paradigm for international relations and economic development predicated on the idea of trust. Hearn's study theorizes trust as an alternative to existing models of exchange, including those based on social capital in the West and traditional Confucian values in China. The book argues convincingly for trust as a foundation for fruitful change in a globalized Cuba and Mexico and as a key to new balances of state, private, and civic power necessitated by the rise of China.Chinese diasporaChineseCubaEthnic relationsChineseMexicoEthnic relationsChinaForeign relations21st centuryChinaRelationsCubaCubaRelationsChinaChinaRelationsMexicoMexicoRelationsChinaChinese diaspora.ChineseEthnic relations.ChineseEthnic relations.303.48/251072303.4825107220.12.04EP-CLASS16.20.32EP-CLASSHearn Adrian H.1975-977408NDDNDDBOOK9910136352503321Diaspora and trust2226510UNINA