Document details

Disruptions as Opportunities: Governing Chinese Society with Interactive Authoritarianism

Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press (2023), xv, 283 pp.

Contains figures, tables, bibliogr. pp. 247-270, index

Series: China Understandings Today

ISBN 978-0-472-05563-0 (pbk); 978-0-472-90330-6 (ebook)

CC BY-NC-ND

"[This book] addresses the long-standing puzzle of why China outlived other one-party authoritarian regimes with particular attention to how the state manages an emerging civil society. Drawing upon over 1,200 survey responses conducted in 126 villages in the Sichuan province, as well as 70 interviews conducted with Civil Society Organization (CSO) leaders and government officials, participant observation, and online research, the book proposes a new theory of interactive authoritarianism to explain how an adaptive authoritarian state manages nascent civil society. Sun argues that when new phenomena and forces are introduced into Chinese society, the Chinese state adopts a three-stage interactive approach toward societal actors: toleration, differentiation, and legalization without institutionalization. Sun looks to three disruptions-earthquakes, internet censorship, and social-media-based guerilla resistance to the ride-sharing industry-to test his theory about the three-stage interactive authoritarian approach and argues that the Chinese government evolves and consolidates its power in moments of crisis." (Publisher description)
PART I: INTRODUCTION
Introduction, 3
1 Governing the Nascent Civil Society in China: Background and Key Players, 28
PART II: THE THREE STAGES OF THE INTERACTIVE AUTHORITARIANISM MODEL
2 Stage I: Authoritarian Tolerance of Civil Society Activities, 43
3 Stage II: Differentiation-Outsourcing Responsibility for Governance, 54
4 Stage III: Legalization without Institutionalization, 76
PART III: THREE "MOST-DIFFERENT CASES" ILLUSTRATING THE INTERACTIVE AUTHORITARIANISM MODEL
5 Case I: The Sichuan Earthquakes and the Governance of the Rising CSOs, 105
6 Case II: Dynamic, Decentralized, and Multilayered Internet Censorship, 132
7 Case III: Internet-Facilitated Guerrilla Resistance of the Ride-Sharing Networks, 168
PART IV: CONCLUSION
8 Governing as an Interactive Authoritarian State 193
Appendix: Eight Useful Tips of Conducting Fieldwork on China 203