12:00 | Friday, April 28, 2023
Lecture Hall, May Hall, HKU
English
Professor of Economic History, Faculty of History and Fellow, All Souls College, University of Oxford
In this Quantitative History Lecture, Debin Ma of the University of Oxford presents his paper which revisits the old thesis of the contrasting paths of modernization between Japan and China. It develops a new analytical framework regarding the role of ideology and ideological change—Meiji Japan’s decisive turn towards the West pitted against Qing China’s lethargic response to Western imperialism – as the key driver behind this contrast. They show that the structural difference between Tokugawa Japan’s feudal, decentralized political regime and Qing China’s centralized bureaucratic system generated differential benefits and costs for regime change and ideological realignment in mid-19th century. Debin ma and his team build a historical narrative to trace the origin of this political bifurcation to the Medieval period. Their new analytical framework supported by a historical narrative and empirical evidence highlights the crucial role of regime change during late 19th century China and Japan through the lens of ideological change as distinctive but complementary elements of culture and institutions.
Debin's co-authors: Jared Rubin (Chapman University) and Weiwen Yin (University of Macau)
Friday, April 28, 2023
Lecture Hall, May Hall, HKU
Debin Ma
English
As the city gets beyond the pandemic, we have resumed in-person events in partnership with the Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Science and the Center for Quantitative History at The University of Hong Kong.
The International Society for Quantitative History (ISFQH) is an independent, not-for-profit organization dedicated to promoting, supporting, and enhancing the advancement of education, in particular research and knowledge dissemination in quantitative history, in Hong Kong and other parts of the world.