Zhou (Hobart and William Smith) does not claim to be the first to advance it, but his premise concerning China's peaceful rise is both credible and significant. China's rise under the reformist Communist Party leadership in the post-Mao era has been unprecedented. Western fears notwithstanding, China's development does not (presently) threaten the global order. However, market forces and an authoritarian, one-party system have fostered severe domestic strains (e.g., inequalities, political corruption, and prostitution) that threaten domestic stability. Social chaos in China would jeopardize the global system. Democratization is the answer, but it must proceed in a two-step sequence: first, the development and fruition of civil society—notably press freedom, citizen participation, and religious freedom—and second, the transition from a one-party to a multiparty system....The book was thoroughly researched and written by one who knows China well. Full of information about contemporary China, it might be a worthwhile addition to university collections on Chinese political economy. Recommended.