Land and Labour in China

E219753

Land and Labour in China is a seminal socio-economic study by R. H. Tawney examining agrarian conditions, rural society, and land tenure in early 20th-century China.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Land and Labour in China canonical 3

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book
person
socio-economic study
academicDiscipline agrarian studies
development studies
analyzes impact of land tenure on Chinese rural society
relationship between land ownership and rural poverty in China
author R. H. Tawney
countryOfFocus China
describedAs seminal socio-economic study of rural China
fieldOfStudy Chinese studies
economics
sociology
focusesOn agrarian structure in China
agricultural productivity in China
land distribution in China
landlord-tenant relations in China
peasant conditions in China
rural social stratification in China
rural taxation in China
village institutions in China
genre economic history
non-fiction
sociology
hasAuthorNationality British
historicalContext Republic of China
surface form: Republican China
influenced later studies of Chinese land reform
scholarship on peasant economies
language English
mainSubject agrarian conditions in China
land tenure in China
rural society in China
notableFor analysis of Chinese rural economy
study of land tenure in Republican-era China
notableWork Land and Labour in China self-linksurface differs
occupation economic historian
social critic
perspective socio-economic analysis
targetAudience economists
scholars of Chinese history
sociologists
students of agrarian studies
temporalFocus early 20th century
usedAs reference work on Chinese rural economy

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

R. H. Tawney notableWork Land and Labour in China
Tawney notableWork Land and Labour in China
subject surface form: R. H. Tawney
Land and Labour in China notableWork Land and Labour in China self-linksurface differs
subject surface form: R. H. Tawney