THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA: COOPERATION AND SCIEN- 

 TIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL INFRASTRUCTURE 



Akhtar, Shahid. Health Care in the People's Republic of China: a Bibliograph,, 

 with Abstracts. Report, IDRC-038 e, 1975. 182 p. Available from the Stat„ 

 Department as FAR 21679-P. 

 Brown, Harrison. "Scholarly Exchanges With the People's Republic of China." 



Science, v. 183, Jan. 11, 1974: 52-54. 

 Craig, Jack. China: Domestic and International Telecommunications, 1949-74. 

 In Chiyia: a Reassessment of the Economy; a compendium of Papers Submitted 

 to the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States. Washington, 

 U.S. Govt. Print. Oflf., 1975. p. 289-310. 



Contents. — Historical development. — Organization and management. — • 

 Status of transmission media. — ^Telecommunication modes and services. — • 

 International telecommunications. — Broadcasting system. 

 Dean, Genevieve C. "Science, Technology and Development: China as a Case 

 Study." China Quarterly, no. 51, July-Sept. 1972: 520-534. 



Economic development — [China]/Technological innovations — [China]/ 

 Science policy — [China]. 

 Dean, Genevieve C. Science and Technology in the Development of Modern China: 

 an Annotated Bibliography. Product of a workshop cosponsored by the Joint 

 Committee on Contemporary China, and the University of Sussex Science 

 Policy Research Unit and the Canadian International Research Center, 

 January 1972. London, Mansell, 1974. 279 p. 

 Dernberger, Robert F. "The Transfer of Technology to China." Asia Quarterly 



no. 3, 1974:229-252. 

 Deshingkar, G. D. "Science and Technology in China: a Preliminary Enquiry." 

 China Report, v. 10, Sept.-Dec. 1974: 69-90. 



A report on the developm.ent of science and technology in China which 



seeks to build on the old Chinese practices to form their own independent 



scientific base. 



Directory u)f Selected Scientific Institutions in Mainland China. Prepared by Surveys 



and Research Corporation. Stanford, California, Hoover Institution Public 



Series no. 96, 1970. 469 p. 



"This volume attempts to present the organization of research and 

 development in the People's Republic of China in the period prior to the 

 Cultural Revolution. It contains information about 490 selected scientific 

 institutions concerned with the physical, biological, medical, and agricultural 

 sciences " 

 "The East is Read." A^a^wre, V. 256, Aug. 21, 1975: 608-610. 



Analysis of China's principle scientific journal Scientia Sinica, indicates 

 that the cultural revolution had little effect on China's international scientific 

 tradition. 

 Harrison, Selig S. "Time Bomb in East Asia." Foreign Policy, no. 20, fall 1975: 

 3-27. 



Presents some of the preliminary findings of a year-long study of China's 

 oil policy. Investigation conducted on behalf of the Carnegie Endowment 

 for International Peace. "Already, by drawing only on its onshore reserves 

 and those of Po Hai Gulf, Peking appears likely to reach the current produc- 

 tion level of Saudi Arabia by 1988 or soon thereafter." 

 Liao, T. R. "Science in China." LC Science Tracer Bullet, June 1975: 1-12. 



Washington, D.C. Library of Congress. 

 Neilan, Edward, and Charles R. Smith. The Future of the China Market — Prospects 

 for Sino- American Trade. Washington, D.C, American Enterprise Institute for 

 Public Policy Research, 1974. 95 p. 

 Orleans, Leo A. "China's Population: Can the Contradictions be Resolved?" 

 In China: a Reassessment of the Economy; a Compendium of Papers Submitted 

 to the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States. Washington, 

 U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1975. p. 69-80. 



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