Author: Chia, Ning

Li-fan Yuan in the early Ch'ing Dynasty
Date1992
Publish_location---
Publisher---
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition
LanguageEnglish
Record_typeThesis/Dissertation (PDF)
Series
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberKNN2680 .C495 1991a
Descriptionpdf. [iv, 394, 3 l. : maps ; 28 cm]
NoteThe Li-fan Yuan in the early Ch'ing Dynasty / Ning Chia.
Dissertation (Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University, 1991)
Diss. dated 1991; copyright page 1992.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 366-380).

Further information on Mongolian code see Legalizing space in China.
Local access dig.pdf. [Chia-Lifanyuan.pdf]

Multimedia
SubjectChina--History--Qing dynasty, 1644-1911 China--Politics and government--1644-1911 Tibet 西藏--Politics and government--1644-1911 China--Politics and government--17th century Mongolia--Politics and government Administrative law--China--Qing dynasty, 1644-1911--Sources China--Ethnic relations--History China. Lifanyuan 理藩院--History Administrative law--China--History--17th century China. Lifanyuan zeli 理藩院則例
Lifanyuan and the management of population diversity in early Qing (1636-1795)
Date2012
Publish_locationHalle/Saale
PublisherMax Planck Institute for Social Anthropology
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition
LanguageEnglish
Record_typeReport (pdf)
SeriesMax Planck Institute for Social Anthropology working papers ; working paper no. 139
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberDS754.14.C55 2012d
Descriptionpdf. [21 leaves :ill., color maps]
NoteLifanyuan and the management of population diversity in early Qing (1636-1795) / Chia Ning.
Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology working papers, working paper no. 139.
Cover title.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 19-21).

Abstract
A Lifanyuan-centered inquiry into Qing history raises statecraft-focused questions: which workings of the Qing statecraft actually accomplished the integration of the Inner Asian people? How were the tensions in the relationship between Inner Asia and the long-lasting dynastic center overcome?
This paper presents an analysis of Lifanyuan governance through ‘social systems’, on which the center-periphery relations were built, and of Lifanyuan management of ‘social entities’, in which the local Inner Asian communities were organized following their own conventions but under Qing supervision. The banner system for the Mongols, the Dalai-amban system for the Tibetans inside heartland Tibet, the tusi system for the Amdo Tibetans in Qinghai, and the beg system for the Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang preserved and sustained four types of social entities centered on each people’s culture and identity. Considering the growing studies of borders and frontiers in relation to concepts of nation, state, and empire-state, this study treats Lifanyuan as a historical “agent” in the Qing Empire formation during the 17th and 18th centuries and discusses its long-term impact on China reaching up to the 21st century.

Local access [Chia-Lifanyuan Diversity Management.pdf].
Available online.

Multimedia
SubjectChina--Ethnic relations Inculturation--China--History Acculturation--China China. Lifanyuan 理藩院--History China. Lifanyuan zeli 理藩院則例 Social structure--China--History--17th-18th centuries
Seriesfoo 151