Abstract

Abstract:

This article examines how new Chinese bureaucrats were made at the Customs College to retrieve the Chinese Maritime Customs Service from the foreign staff in the Service. The policies of training new bureaucrats vacillated between three courses: generalist education, specialist training, and cadre cultivation. China's assertion of control over the Service set the scene for four decades of political struggle between the Inspectorate of Customs, Chinese governments, and the Nationalist Party.

The article's first section explores how China's drive to self-modernization generated the needs for new bureaucrats, led to the College's initiation, and shaped its educational program and policies. The second section examines how the Nationalist Party politicized the College's education and discusses interrelations between the war decade from 1937–1949 and the decline of the College's status. Finally, it concludes by discussing the continuity of the College in Mainland China and Taiwan after 1949.

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