ID | 159539 |
Title Proper | Political consequences of deliberative democracy and electoral democracy in China |
Other Title Information | an empirical comparative analysis from four counties |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ma, Deyong ; Hsu, Szu-chien ; Deyong Ma, Szu-chien Hsu |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Recent research suggests that both electoral democracy and deliberative democracy under a nondemocratic regime may help to sustain existing authoritarian rule but is likely to eventually lead to the democratization of authoritarian regimes by eroding its basis in the long term. However, few studies have used comparative methods to empirically analyze the political effects of these two types of democracy together. In this article, we use survey data and in-depth interviews to empirically analyze two local political reform experiments in China. Four fieldwork sites were selected: two where democratic experiments have been implemented and two where no political reform has been implemented. We compared the political consequences of the two locations of democratic reform experimentation using indicators such as political trust, administrative performance, and democratic aspirations. The results show that the electoral democracy experiment delivered better governance and higher political legitimacy than the deliberative democracy experiment, while deliberative democracy performs better than the usual township governance system. Although the results show that the electoral democracy experiment fosters higher democratic aspiration, strong evidence verifying the causal mechanism between deliberative democracy experiment and appeals for democracy has not been found. Based on the empirical findings, we discuss the implications of the two experiments for China's politics. |
`In' analytical Note | China Review Vol. 18, No.2; May 2018: p.1-31 |
Journal Source | China Review 2018-08 18, 2 |
Key Words | China ; Deliberative Democracy ; Electoral Democracy ; Political Consequences |