This series will explore domestic and international issues affecting governance in 21st Century China. China is at a critical point in its national growth and facing immense challenges as well as opportunities. The course of its future development will be determined by its capacity to deal with these issues at local and international levels, and to build a sustainable path of development. This series will have an inherently interdisciplinary focus looking at issues such as local governance, public policy and administration, social, urban, and nonprofit development, environmental politics, regional diplomacy and international affairs.
Dr. Zhimin Chen is a Vice President of Fudan University. He is a Changjiang Scholar, professor of inter- national relations and a Jean Monnet Chair professor of European foreign policy at School of International Relations and Public Affaris. He is the editor in chief of Chinese Political Science Review. He is one of the vice presidents of the Chinese Association of International Studies.
Dr. Yijia Jing is a Changjiang Scholar, Dean of the Institute for Global Public Policy, and Seaker Cha n Chair Professor of the School of International Relations and Public Affairs, Fudan University. He conducts research on privatization, governance, and collaborative service delivery. He is editor-in-chief of Fudan Public Administration Review and co-editor of International Public Management Journal.
https://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/15023
palgrave@fudan.edu.cn
Here are some questions potential authors may have, and our answers.
1. Can we have edited books included in this series?Yes. Both sole or co-authored and edited books (65,000-90,000 words) can be included in the series. We also accept mid-length monograph projects (20,000-50,000 words).
2. What is the scope of issues covered? The focus is on politics, public governance and public affairs in China, including topics related to politics and development, public administration and policy, international relations and diplomacy, as well as socioeconomic issues. If you are not sure, please email the series editors with your book ideas for their opinion.
3. How can I propose a book to the editors? Please send the book proposal and two or three full chapters (a full manuscript is fine) to the series editors by email. We will let you know within a month if the book proposal can progress to peer review process, based on an evaluation of the theme, structure of the book, and quality of the work. If a proposal is accepted by the series editors, the publisher, Palgrave Macmillan, will arrange the blind peer review.
4. How long does the blind peer review process take? Depending on the responsiveness of the reviewers, it can take one to three months. After the peer review, the book proposal may be rejected or conditionally accepted.
5. What are the next steps if a proposal is accepted? The author(s) will sign a contract with Palgrave. You will be contacted by a Commissioning Editor from Palgrave for contract issues. Once the book enters production, a Production Editor from Palgrave will liaison with you to handle manuscript submission and publication. For more details, Download Author Handbook.pdf
6. How long does it take to get a book published? Proposal review may take 1-3 months. The contract and related issues generally take less than one month. After a full
This book provides a state-of-art analysis of collaborative governance in China, illustrated by cases in service delivery, policy, and intergovernmental networks.
This book explores public sector innovations in China. While examining existing theories of innovations, it provides frontier cases with in-depth analysis.
This book explores the process of urbanization and the profound challenges to China’s urban governance.
This book is the first of its kind to explore China’s engagement with the International Criminal Court primarily from a legal perspective.
This book is a theoretical and empirical analysis of institutional foundation of long-term economic growth from the perspective of state-market and central-local relations.
This book provides an in-depth analysis of the relations between China and the EU, tracing the development of this complex, yet intriguing, relationship.
This book offers a critical assessment of governance ideas in the context of Chinese neoliberalism.
This book explores the changing face of development assistance. It’s a compilation of findings and ideas about the nature of New Development Assistance.
This book explains why conflict exists among Chinese foreign-policy actors in Africa and argues against the concept that China has a grand strategy in relation to Africa.
Author timelines.pdf PhD Tips.pdf