essay

Structure of government

regional handbook of Northeast China, compiled by The Far Eastern and Russian Institute of the University of WashingtonNew Haven, Conn.Published In 1956 • Pages: 322-345

By: Tang, Peter S. H., University Of Washington. Far Eastern And Russian Institute.

AbstractBrief abstract written by HRAF anthropologists who have done the subject indexing for the document
This chapter from "A Regional Handbook on Northeast China" is a discussion of government organization under the Qing Dynasty, Chinese Republic, Japanese Occupation, and People's Republic.
SubjectsDocument-level OCM identifiers given by the anthropology subject indexers at HRAF
History
Territorial organization
Government institutions
Political movements
cultureCulture name from the Outline of World Cultures (OWC)
Manchu
HRAF PubDateThe date HRAF published the document
2012
RegionThe area the document pertains to
Asia
Sub RegionThe more specific area the document pertains to, which is located within the Region
East Asia
Document TypeMay include journal articles, essays, collections of essays, monographs, or chapters/parts of monographs
essay
Evaluation
Creator TypeThe type of person writing the document, e.g. Ethnographer, Missionary, Archaeologist, Folklorist, Linguist, Indigenous Person, and so on.
Social Scientist
Document Rating A ranking done by HRAF anthropologists based on the strength of the source material on a scale of 1 to 5, as follows: 1 - poor; 2 - fair; 3 - good, useful data, but not uniformly excellent; 4 - excellent secondary data; 5 - excellent primary data.
4: Excellent Secondary Data
AnalystThe HRAF anthropologist who subject indexed the document and prepared other materials for the eHRAF culture/tradition collection
John Beierle ;1974 ;Ian Skoggard; 2012
Field DateThe date the researcher conducted the fieldwork or archival research that produced the document
No date
Coverage DateThe date or dates that the information in the document pertains to
1931-1955
Coverage PlaceLocation of the research culture or tradition (often a smaller unit such as a band, community, or archaeological site)
northeast China
NotesAdditional notes
Peter Tang
Includes bibliographical references (p. 340)
LCSHLibrary of Congress Subject Headings
Manchus
University of Washington. Far Eastern and Russian Institute