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JournalISSN: 1080-6954

Journal of Chinese Political Science 

Springer Science+Business Media
About: Journal of Chinese Political Science is an academic journal published by Springer Science+Business Media. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): China & Politics. It has an ISSN identifier of 1080-6954. Over the lifetime, 619 publications have been published receiving 6041 citations. The journal is also known as: Zhongguo zheng zhi xue kan & JCPS.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Zheng Wang1
TL;DR: The authors examines the concept and context of the Chinese Dream, especially its core concept of national rejuvenation, and analyzes the context of this new narrative from three closely connected aspects: historical perspectives, domestic legitimacy, and the comprehension of the concept in an international context.
Abstract: With the Chinese Dream as a new, signature ideology of the CCP comes the important and challenging task of understanding its concept. This article examines the concept and context of the Chinese Dream, especially its core concept of national rejuvenation. It focuses on tracing the background of the concept and analyzes the context of this new narrative from three closely connected aspects: historical perspectives, domestic legitimacy, and the comprehension of the concept in an international context.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Yuchao Zhu1
TL;DR: Zhu et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the main reasons why the CCP government adopts a very pragmatic strategy of "performance legitimacy" since China began its reform and evaluated the political and social outcome of its policies, finding that China's adaptation strategy is a path dependent decision, and if it will function as a potential catalyst for significant political change in the future.
Abstract: The CCP government has adopted a very pragmatic strategy of “performance legitimacy” since China began its reform. It means that the government relies on accomplishing concrete goals such as economic growth, social stability, strengthening national power, and “good governance” (governing competence and accountability) to retain its legitimacy. While it is able to attain considerable domestic support by implementing this strategy, it has no particular interest in pursuing democratization. This chapter tries to make sense of the main reasons why it has adopted this strategy and to evaluate the political and social outcome of its policies. The chapter intends to discover if China’s adaptation strategy is a “path dependent” decision, and if it will function as a potential catalyst for significant political change in the future. The chapter also explores what the Chinese government has achieved through its adaptation strategy and what and why it has been unwilling or unable to do to obtain an “original justification” of power. Zhu skillfully travels back and forth between the terrains of theory and practice to make better sense of legitimacy and governance in China’s experiences.

135 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used German Confucius Institutes as a case study to bridge the gap between the actual structure, operation mode, and activities of these institutions, and provided empirical data to better understand the instrument of China's image shaping efforts.
Abstract: Since 2004 China has set up over 700 Confucius Institutes and Confucius Classrooms around the world to promote its language and culture and thereby to shape its image. Despite this impressive number Confucius Institutes are surprisingly understudied, especially in terms of their actual structure, operation mode and activities. This paper uses German Confucius Institutes as a case study to bridge this gap. It first discusses the concepts of public and cultural diplomacy and culture institutes as a conceptual tool to analyze Confucius Institutes. It then turns to the case study to provide empirical data to better understand this instrument of China’s image shaping efforts. It argues that Confucius Institutes are connected to the rise of China and a unique member of the family of national culture institutes.

109 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual framework on the relations between the idea of "harmonious world" and China's soft power wielding in its rising process is proposed, which examines a rising China's foreign policies towards three targeted regions in the global south (Africa, East Asia and Latin America).
Abstract: This study attempts to answer a new but important question in China’s foreign policy— how Beijing has wielded its soft power to construct its ideal of international order in the age of China’s rise. Before empirical analyses, this study tries to set up a conceptual framework on the relations between the idea of “harmonious world” and China’s soft power wielding in its rising process. Within this framework, this study examines a rising China’s foreign policies towards three targeted regions in the global south—Africa, East Asia, and Latin America. On the one hand, due to Beijing’s carefully-designed and soft power-based foreign policies, the global south has become an increasingly harmonious environment for Beijing to cultivate a favorable national image, exert its political influence on regional affairs, benefit its own domestic economic developments, etc. On the other hand, some problems such as the so-called “China’s New Colonialism” and the increased vigilance from the other powers have already began to challenge Beijing’s harmony in those regions.

83 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argues that neither the developmental state nor the market-preserving federalism models are applicable to contemporary China and argues that the political economy of reform in China violates key assumptions and expectations in both models.
Abstract: This paper argues that neither the developmental state nor the marketpreserving federalism models are applicable to contemporary China. Despite superficial similarities with elements of each model, the political economy of reform in China violates key assumptions and expectations in both. In contrast to the expectations of the developmental state model, the center has not systematically allocated credit to the most productive sectors of the economy; instead the latter has had to rely on informal finance. And in contrast to the expectations of market-preserving federalism, fiscal decentralization has lead to a host of unintended consequences at the local level—namely, the hoarding of off-budget revenues for public goods provision, reliance on informal finance for private sector development, and local protectionism. These unintended and informal coping strategies depart substantially from the core components of both the developmental state and market-preserving federalism models.

83 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202320
202275
202155
202036
201942
201835