China, like many authoritarian regimes, struggles with the tension between the need to foster economic development by empowering local officials and the regime's imperative to control them politically. Landry explores how the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) manages local officials in order to meet the
Local Elites in Post-Mao China
✍ Scribed by Yingjie Guo (editor)
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 192
- Series
- Routledge Studies on China in Transition 56
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book provides fresh insights into the study of Chinese elites at the county level and below. By shifting the analytical focus onto the agency of elites at the local level and away from the institutional structures within which they operate, it fills a number of significant gaps in the field.
In particular, this book addresses the lacunae through an empirically rich and diverse set of case studies. It proceeds from the premise that the study of local elites can be most fruitful through examining their relations with each other and with the groups that wield power in the community. Particularly pertinent to the analyses are three major relations, namely the relationship between the elites and their environment, between particular types of elites, and between the locality and the upper and lower scales. Ultimately, it concludes that these relations are not only essential to understanding local elites in post-Mao China but also in accounting for socio-political change and in distinguishing China from other types of societies.
As a study of local elites in China, this book will be useful to students and scholars of Chinese politics, political sociology and Chinese Studies in general.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of illustrations
List of contributors
Local elites in post-Mao China
Perspectives on Chinese elites
Going local
Elites in relation to localities
The chapters
Note
References
1. Local cadre elites and policy implementation in contemporary China
Introduction: Conceptualizing county and township cadres as a political elite
Local cadre elite habitus and strategic action
Conclusion
Notes
References
2. Inside the flower vase: A report on private entrepreneurs’ political participation in a county-level People’s Political Consultative Conference
Background
Representation of the private sector in the PPCC
Private entrepreneurs’ participation in the PPCC
Conclusion
Notes
References
3. Village elections and the rise of a new elite: A comparative study of two north China villages
Background of the two villages
The case of Village A
The case of Village B
Conclusions
Notes
References
4. Why did the Party secretary resign? A case study of village elites’ exit from politics
The arrest of gamblers and the offensive against Yu Guoquan
The involvement of superior authorities
Family planning
Concluding discussion
Notes
References
5. Public goods, piety and place: The legitimation strategies of local business elites in China
Providers of public goods
Piety and place
Notes
References
6. Urbanising collective land: Localisms, elites and the industrialisation of the Pearl River Delta
Land and accumulation in the Pearl River Delta
Unravelling the local: The shangjiao of High Village’s land
Discussion: Local elites and new coalitions
Notes
References
7. Local economic elites and charitable giving
Economic elites, charity and state–society relations
Types of charities supported
Discussion of results and conclusions
Notes
References
8. How a local growth coalition collapsed: A case study of an anti-confiscation movement of private oil investors in a northwestern Chinese county
Three stages: From alliance to conflict, and the current ‘compromise’
Prologue of the event: A ‘fish and water’ relationship
Unfolding of the event: An ‘oil and water’ relationship
The follow-up: The restructuring of the Yanchang Group
Concluding remarks and policy implications
Notes
References
China’s local elites: The political economy of transition
Market Transition Theory and its critics
Interviews with new economic elites
References
Index
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