Public Participation and State Building in China

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A01=agan Pavlicevic
Administrative Penalty Law
Author_agan Pavlicevic
authoritarian governance
Category=JHB
Category=JP
CCP Legitimacy
CCP Rule
Chinese Communist Party
Chinese politics
Civil Society
civil society engagement
consultative democracy
Consultative Meetings
Contemporary China
contemporary Chinese politics
Deliberative Meetings
Democratization
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Government Innovation
Hangzhou's Government
Hangzhou’s Government
Harmonious Society
Improve Governance Performance
Innovation Discourse
institutional innovation China
Local Government Innovation
local government reform
NGO Activist
Non electoral
Non-electoral Participatory
non-electoral political participation mechanisms
One party regimes
Participatory Budgeting
Participatory Mechanisms
participatory policymaking
Participatory Reforms
Political sociology
popular legitimacy
Public Administration
Public Hearings
Public Opinion Research Center
Public participation
Qingyuan County
State building
Studying State Building
village elections
Wenling City
Xinhe Township
Zhejiang

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367280925
  • Weight: 399g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Oct 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores non-electoral means of public participation in contemporary

China, both as an outcome of and a key contributor to the party-state’s

efforts to improve its governing capacity.

Examining consultative meetings, public hearings, and the use of surveys

and questionnaires in Zhejiang province, on an empirical level, the study

evaluates the historical development and institutional backgrounds of these

mechanisms, as well as provides a critical assessment of their achievements

and failures. At the same time, on a theoretical level, this book contributes

to the broader scholarship on contemporary Chinese politics and political

development within one-party regimes, as well as debates about state building

and democratisation. Relying on the distinction between access to and

exercise of power, it concludes that non-electoral public participation is in

fact a function of state building. Developing a state capable of producing

effective solutions to governing challenges, it is argued, requires public participation

in the governing process.

With analysis informed by interviews with local-level policy-makers and

officials, academics, and citizens’ representatives and activists, Public Participation

and State Building in China will be a valuable research resource for

students and scholars of Chinese politics, political science, and civil society.

Dragan Pavlićević is an Associate Professor in China Studies at Xi’an

Jiaotong – Liverpool University, China. He holds a PhD from the University

of Nottingham and was previously Visiting Research Fellow at the East

Asian Institute, National University of Singapore.

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