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Second Long March: Struggling Against the Chinese Communists Under the Republic of China (Taiwan) Constitution
 
 
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Second Long March: Struggling Against the Chinese Communists Under the Republic of China (Taiwan) Constitution [Hardcover]

Peter Kien-Hong YU (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

0826430104 978-0826430106 March 1, 2009
This work, written by an expert in the politics of Mainland China and Taiwan, looks at the role the Constitution of the Republic of China has played in the development of Taiwan since 1949 and its potential influence on the People's Republic of China.
The Chinese Communists conducted the first long march for the sake of the majority of Chinese people, with the victory of MAO Zedong. In the second long march, CHIANG Kai-shek and his successors tried to convert the Chinese mainland from a Communist, totalitarian system, into a democratic, prosperous one by relying on the spirit of the Republic of China (ROC) constitution and by setting itself as a good example, in gradually guaranteeing freedom and democracy. Needless to say, this march is long and difficult.
The Second Long March challenges other models and theories on the study of the relationship between the ROC (Taiwan area) and mainland China or the People's Republic of China (PRC) since China became politically (as opposed to legally) divided in December 1949. Arguably, it is the ROC Constitution that has helped ROC citizens to live in a non-Communist or anti-Communist political system. Actively promoting democracy and freedom on the Chinese mainland (neidi) can further guarantee the Taiwan area's survival.
The book will provide valuable scholarship of interest to anyone researching the political history of China and its prospects for democratization.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Yu deserves credit for formulating a basic theory. Few dare do this. His theory is heuristic. It makes one think. It is a useful framework for explaining Taiwan's success in democratizing, which still interests leaders of developing nations and scholars everywhere.

Yu also provides an interesting look at Taiwan's politics as he goes. He is a homegrown observer and knows the ins and outs of how the system works in principle and in practice. He adds tidbits of inside information along the way, many of which have not been cited or at least assessed by other scholars. This makes the book a more interesting read.

The Second Long March is recommended to all who want to view Taiwan's history and politics, especially its democratization, from a unique perspective. Why is this so important? Taiwan is the only non-negotiable issue between the United States and the People's Republic of China, the sole superpower and the world's foremost rising power, and the relationship between them is the basis of stability in the global economy and international politics." -- John F. Copper is the Stanley J. Buckman Professor of International Studies at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee.

The Second Long March is recommended to all who want to view Taiwan's history and politics, especially its democratization, from a unique perspective.
(Taiwan Review )

"Yu deserves credit for formulating a basic theory. Few dare do this. His theory is heuristic. It makes one think. It is a useful framework for explaining Taiwan's success in democratizing, which still interests leaders of developing nations and scholars everywhere.

Yu also provides an interesting look at Taiwan's politics as he goes. He is a homegrown observer and knows the ins and outs of how the system works in principle and in practice. He adds tidbits of inside information along the way, many of which have not been cited or at least assessed by other scholars. This makes the book a more interesting read.

The Second Long March is recommended to all who want to view Taiwan's history and politics, especially its democratization, from a unique perspective. Why is this so important? Taiwan is the only non-negotiable issue between the United States and the People's Republic of China, the sole superpower and the world's foremost rising power, and the relationship between them is the basis of stability in the global economy and international politics." -- John F. Copper is the Stanley J. Buckman Professor of International Studies at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee. 

The Second Long March is recommended to all who want to view Taiwan’s history and politics, especially its democratization, from a unique perspective.
(, )

"This work is worth reading especially for the people who are intereseted in the R.O.C.'s relations with the P.R.C and the U.S. or Taiwan's political development in general after WWII because it not only provides a new theory of why the R.O.C. on Tawan has survived since 1949 but also well documents much R.O.C.-related historic information including important domestic and international political events, public statements made by politicians, news reports, scholarly works, etc. in the period from 1949 to 2008." --Journal of Chinese Political Science, Vol 16, No 3, 2011

About the Author

Peter Kien-hong YU is Professor at Swinburne University of Technology in Sarawak, Malaysia. He also was Director of the Graduate School of International Affairs at Ming Chuan University, Professor at the National Sun Yat-sen University, and Senior Research fellow at the National University of Singapore. He is the author of over 15 books in both English and Chinese and over 90 journal articles and book chapters published in the West.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Continuum (March 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826430104
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826430106
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,963,300 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Rambling, unconvincing, December 5, 2009
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This review is from: Second Long March: Struggling Against the Chinese Communists Under the Republic of China (Taiwan) Constitution (Hardcover)
Modern Chinese history, Yu Peter Kien-hong argues, can be divided into two defining periods -- the First Long March, led by Communist leader Mao Zedong to "liberate peasants and farmers," and the Second Long March, in which non- and anti-communists sought to "promote full-fledged and mature constitutional democracy" in China.

Yu, a professor at Ming Chuan University, posits that Taiwan and "mainland China" are both part of the Republic of China (ROC). Both Taiwan and the People's Republic of China (PRC), though they have engaged in different, lesser marches since, are bound by the same destiny, in the form of the ROC Constitution, to "reunite" at one point. As the ROC was never dissolved, the PRC is a derivative of, or partial successor to, the ROC. In other words, it did not completely replace the ROC, meaning that it can only claim sovereignty over Taiwan as part of the ROC.

To make his point, Yu walks us through the marches led by Chiang Kai-shek, Yan Chia-kan, Chiang Ching-kuo, Lee Teng-hui and Chen Shui-bian, arguing that despite great contests of power and changing times, the leadership in Taiwan -- which throughout the book the author annoyingly refers to as "Taiwan area" -- nevertheless continued to adhere to the ROC Constitution, which in his view has worked quite well in its "struggle" against the CCP.

While not shying away from criticizing the Chiangs and Lee, Yu shows his true political colors in his description of Chen, whose election engendered a "political mess plus scandals of one type or another," and who did a "terrible job" as president. Yu's problem, however, is that in the 35 pages he dedicates to the Chen march, he fails to show us why his tenure was so terrible, relying on the 2004 shooting incident -- a favorite of deep blues in their attacks on the former president -- to somehow make his point. Here, as in many books written by KMT sympathizers, the pan-blue camp's scorched earth tactics in the legislature, which often prevented the executive from governing, are papered over.

It is more likely, therefore, that Yu's unfavorable characterization of Chen lies in the fact that the latter was the leader who came closest to abandoning the

so-called Second March by forsaking the ROC Constitution in his efforts to create a Republic of Taiwan (ROT). Doing so would have destroyed, once and for all, the theory -- now on life support -- that "mainland China" and Taiwan are two parts of the ROC.

As long as Taiwan adheres to the Constitution, written under much different times in 1947, it is possible to hope, as Yu does, that at some point in future it will be possible for the two sides to "reunite." As this is ostensibly Yu's preferred scenario, Chen's pro-Taiwan ideology was therefore a threat. This prompts him into reminding us, though he is wrong, as it turns out, that Ma Ying-jeou's victory in 2008 was a "severe warning" sent by the "majority" of voters in the pan-blue camp "that the ROC [i.e., Taiwan] cannot abandon mainland sovereignty." We all know, of course, that the majority of people who voted for Ma did so because he promised to revive the economy and improve relations with Beijing, not because of some deep-felt desire to claim sovereignty over China.

For all his opposition to Chen's efforts to create a Republic of Taiwan -- which like the PRC could arguably be seen as a "successor" of the ROC -- Yu fails to mention that in 1954 Beijing adopted its own Constitution of the People's Republic of China, which rather than draw from the ROC Constitution, is modeled after the Constitution of the Soviet Union, written in 1936. We can therefore argue that the disconnect that obviated the ROC Constitution was not caused by the Taiwanese independence movement, but rather by the enactment of the PRC Constitution, the latest version of which was adopted in 1982. Yu would be extremely naive if he thought that "reunification" would occur under terms other than the PRC's -- that is, under the ROC framework he advocates.

Equally unpersuasive is Yu's argument that the KMT should join forces with like-minded elements in China in fostering full democracy, efforts that surely would take us closer to war in the Taiwan Strait than anything the Lee and Chen administrations ever did in the name of Taiwanese independence. Toward the book's end, Yu himself admits that the CCP prioritizes its hold on power and only sees the possibility of democracy "with Chinese characteristics" at some distant point in the future. He also ignores the impact that more than 110 years of separate rule has had on identity in Taiwan and people's desire to link their destinies with a regime that, to all, is an alien one.

Sadly, the relatively simple -- and by no means original -- theory at the core of The Second Long March is marred by damnably poor editing and the author's tendency to jump from one point to another without any seeming connection between them, which is distracting and often confusing. Outrageous passages, such as his claim that 650,000 natives of Taiwan -- or one-tenth of the population -- were slaughtered by Imperial Japanese forces during the colonial period (the figure is closer to 30,000, according to many experts, while only Chinese propaganda supports such numbers), serve to discredit Yu and raise questions about the intentions of his badly written, flawed and ultimately unconvincing his book.

(Originally published in the Taipei Times, Sunday, December 6, 2009, page 14.)
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