The Pioneering Contribution and Contemporary Implications of On the Ten Major Relationships in Exploring the Path of Chinese-style Modernization
- YIXIN 출판사
- International Academic Tribune
- Vol.2 No.4
-
2025.11100 - 112 (13 pages)
-
DOI : 10.59825/iat.2025.2.4.100
- 0
On the Ten Major Relationships is a model work combining the fundamental principles of Marxism with China's specific realities. It represents the preliminary consolidation of China's socialist construction experience and marks the beginning of the Chinese Communist Part's systematic and independent exploration of a socialist modernization path suitable for China. Drawing lessons from the Soviet model–dominated socialist construction strategy, On the Ten Major Relationships was proposed the fundamental idea of “learning from the Soviet experience while independently exploring the path of socialist construction,” advocating the mobilization of all positive factors to serve socialist construction. The work also put forward a series of major initiatives, such as the “two-legged” approach to industrialization, promoting the “second integration” of Marxism-Leninism with China's realities and preliminarily outlining the path toward Chinese industrialization. This provides both an ideological foundation and practical reference for independently exploring the path of Chinese-style modernization under new era conditions. To ensure a stable and long-term advancement of the new journey of Chinese-style modernization, it is necessary to properly balance top-level design and practical exploration, mobilize all positive factors for socialist modernization, adhere to dialectical thinking and a holistic approach, and advance the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation independently and self-reliantly.
Ⅰ. Introduction
Ⅱ. The Context of On the Ten Major Relationships
Ⅲ. The Pioneering Contribution of On the Ten Major Relationships to Exploring Chinese-Style Modernization
Ⅳ. The Practical Implications of “On the Ten Major Relationships” for Exploring Chinese-Style Modernization
Ⅴ. Conclusion
References
(0)
(0)