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Journal ArticleDOI

“Fragmented Authoritarianism 2.0”: Political Pluralization in the Chinese Policy Process*

Andrew Mertha
- 01 Dec 2009 - 
- Vol. 200, pp 995-1012
TLDR
The authors argue that the rules of the policy-making process are still captured by the fragmented authoritarianism framework, but that the process has become increasingly pluralized: barriers to entry have been lowered, at least for certain actors (hitherto peripheral officials, non-governmental organizations and the media) identified here as "policy entrepreneurs".
Abstract
Traditional analyses of political liberalization in China focus on elections or other facets of democratization. But they cannot account for the fact that although China remains authoritarian, it is nevertheless responsive to the increasingly diverse demands of Chinese society. I argue that the rules of the policy-making process are still captured by the fragmented authoritarianism framework, but that the process has become increasingly pluralized: barriers to entry have been lowered, at least for certain actors (hitherto peripheral officials, non-governmental organizations and the media) identified here as “policy entrepreneurs.” With policy change as the variable of interest, I compare three cases of hydropower policy outcomes. I argue that policy entrepreneurs' ability to frame the issue effectively explains variation in hydropower policy outcomes. I then extend these findings to an unlikely policy area, international trade, specifically, the 2001–06 Sino-EU trade talks over child-resistant lighter safety regulations.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Let Many Civil Societies Bloom: The Rise of Consultative Authoritarianism in China

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse civil society development in China using examples from Beijing to demonstrate the causal role of local officials' ideas about these groups during the last 20 years, and find growing convergence on a new model of state-society relationship that they call consultative authoritarianism, which encourages the simultaneous expansion of a fairly autonomous civil society and the development of more indirect tools of state control.
Book

Media Commercialization and Authoritarian Rule in China

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the role of media as an instrument of regime stability and change in China and other authoritarian states and found that media credibility and media branding can influence public opinion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Central–Local Relations: Recentralization and Environmental Governance in China

Genia Kostka, +1 more
- 01 Sep 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, central and local interests, capacities and interactions across policy issues and government agencies are investigated in the context of the current phase of recentralization, and the authors draw an empirically and theoretically rich picture of central-local relations that highlights the innate complexity of China's environmental governance patterns during the current phases of recentRALization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding China’s ‘Belt and Road Initiative’: beyond ‘grand strategy’ to a state transformation analysis

TL;DR: The massive "Belt and Road Initiative" (BRI) as discussed by the authors is designed to build infrastructure and coordinate policymaking across Eurasia and eastern Africa, and is widely seen as a clearly-defined, top-down "gr...
Book

Civil Society under Authoritarianism: The China Model

TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors argue that interactions between local officials and civil society facilitate a learning process, whereby each actor learns about the intentions and work processes of the other, and this duality motivates local officials in China to construct a'social management' system, known as consultative authoritarianism, to encourage the beneficial aspects and discourage the dangerous ones.
References
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Book

Agendas, alternatives, and public policies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the origins, rationality, incrementalism, and Garbage Cans of the idea of agenda status and present a case study of noninterview measures of Agenda status.
Book

Power in Movement: Social Movements and Contentious Politics

TL;DR: The history of contention in social movements can be traced to the birth of the modern social movement as discussed by the authors, and the dynamics of social movements have been studied in the context of contention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative Politics and the Comparative Method

TL;DR: This paper is a systematic analysis of the comparative method, and it is argued that the case study method is closely related to theComparison method.
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