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Leadership, Legitimacy, and Conflict in China: From a Charismatic Mao to the Politics of Succession

TLDR
The only source for citations to North American scholarship on Eastern and Central Europe, the Balkans, the Baltic States, and the former Soviet Union is the Bibliographical Reference as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
This bibliography is the only source for citations to North American scholarship on Eastern and Central Europe, the Balkans, the Baltic States, and the former Soviet Union.

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How Gullible are We? A Review of the Evidence from Psychology and Social Science:

TL;DR: A long tradition of scholarship, from ancient Greece to Marxism or some contemporary social psychology, portrays humans as strongly gullible and will not accept harmful messages by being unduly deferent as discussed by the authors.
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Mao Cult: Rhetoric and Ritual in China's Cultural Revolution

Daniel Leese
TL;DR: Leese et al. as discussed by the authors analyzed the history of Mao's cult within the Chinese Communist Party and at the grassroots level, and found that Mao would use this symbolic power to mobilize Chinese youth to rebel against party bureaucracy itself.
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Policy Advocacy Coalitions as Causes of Policy Change in China? Analyzing Evidence from Contemporary Environmental Politics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors employ the advocacy coalition framework (ACF), a set of concepts developed to account for policymaking primarily in the United States, to analyze factors that led China to downsize its latest big hydropower project on the Nu River.
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Japan in the politics of Chinese leadership legitimacy: recent developments in historical perspective

Christopher R. Hughes
- 29 May 2008 - 
TL;DR: This paper explored Sino-Japanese relations by looking at how negative sentiments towards Japan among the Chinese population are deployed as a form of political capital in struggles among Chinese Communist Party elite, resulting in the downfall of two leaders.
Journal ArticleDOI

China After the 13th Congress

TL;DR: The Third Plenum of the Third National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CPCP) was held in December 1978, and by the spring of that year the confrontation between the Whateverists and the supporters of the "practice criterion" had become open and acute as discussed by the authors.