Online photo exhibition of China in Development (1911-2011)
(CPC Encyclopedia)
Updated: 2011-09-16 16:52
China in Development (1911-2011)
- Plans for National Reconstruction and China's Great Revival
Foreword
Sun Yat-sen, the spiritual leader of the Revolution of 1911, wrote a treatise titled the International Development of China in February 1919, which, along with the Sun Wen Theory and Preliminary Law, came to be known collectively as Sun Yat-sen's Plans for National Reconstruction. The International Development of China is also called the Material Reconstruction as part of the Plans for National Reconstruction and constitutes a master plan for the industrialization of China.
While constituting such a plan, Sun Yat-sen always upheld the principle of learning from the best and chose the most advaced modern country as a reference. At the same time, he put emphasis on "observing the national conditions" and came up with a plan that adapted to China's situations.
The International Development of China involves 10 categories:
1. development of a communications system;
2. development of commercial harbors;
3. modern cities with public utilities to be constructed in all railway centers, termini and alongside harbors;
4. water power development;
5. iron and steel works and cement works on the largest scale in order to supply the above needs;
6. mineral development;
7. agricultural development;
8. irrigationall work on the largest scale in Mogolia and Xinjiang;
9. reforestation in central and north China;
10. colonization in Manchuria, Mongolia, XinJiang, Qinghai and Tibet.