The sinews of state power
the rise and demise of the cohesive local state in rural China
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Word Count
60,750 words, Guess
Page Count
243 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archivesinewsofstatepow0000wang
- ISBN-100190605731
- ISBN-139780190605735
- ISBN-139780190605759
- ISBN-139780190609511
and 7 more
- ISBN-100190605758
- ISBN-100190609516
- Library of Congress Control Number2016050251
- OCLC Control Number962552298
- Better World Books9780190605735
- Better World Books9780190605759
- Open LibraryOL27232100M
Classifications
- DDC320.8/40951
- LCCJS7353.A8 W3244 2017
- LCCJQ1506.S8
Description
"The Sinews of State Power seeks to explain why rural China has been so unstable since 2000, despite numerous national reforms. Using original fieldwork, it traces the rise and demise of cohesive local states in rural China since the Maoist era. It shows that, the county, township, and village levels of government, when in alliance, have facilitated economic growth and caused social grievances. However, national reforms redressing local deviation, together with individual responses from each level of administration, have dismantled elite alliances, and consequentially undermined the extractive, coercive, and responsive capacity of the state. This book forms dialogue with two fields of inquiry in China studies and comparative politics. First, researches on farmer protest often either focus on farmers' grievances, organizations, and strategies, or examine responses from the state as a uniform entity. This book, instead, highlights the anthropology of the state by looking into elite cohesion across administrative levels that determines the exercise of state capacity. Second, studies of regime stability or endurance have stressed holistic factors, such as institutional adaptability, political culture, or epidemic corruption. The Sinews of State Power instead revisits the fundamental components of a capable government - a coherent and robust local leadership that enables the function of a state."-- "Based on original fieldwork, The Sinews of State Power seeks to understand continuous rural instability in China despite national reforms in the post-2000s. It offers a fresh perspective by revisiting the fundamental components of a capable government -a coherent and robust local leadership, and tracing its rise and demise since the Maoist era"--
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