State and Social Protests in China

£18.00

State and Social Protests in China

Political structure and processes Constitution: government and the state Central / national / federal government Indigenous people: governance and politics Pressure groups, protest movements and non-violent action

Authors: Yongshun Cai, Chih-Jou Jay Chen

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Collection: Elements in Politics and Society in East Asia

Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 8th December 2022

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 12 Mb

ISBN: 9781108996082


Social Protests in China

China has witnessed numerous incidents of social protests over the past three decades. Protests create uncertainty for authoritarian governments, and the Chinese government has created, strengthened, and coordinated multiple dispute-resolution institutions to manage social conflicts and protests.

Accommodating the aggrieved prevents the accumulation of grievances in society, but concessions require resources. As the frequency and scale of collective action are closely tied to the political opportunity for action, the Chinese government has also contained protest by shaping the political opportunity available to the aggrieved.

Cai and Chen show that when the Chinese central government prioritizes social control, as it has under Xi Jinping's leadership, it signals that it will tolerate local governments' use of coercion. The result is an environment that is not conducive to the mobilization of collective action, large-scale occurrences of which have been uncommon in China in recent years.

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