Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1994Hits:21571519Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID189061
Title ProperCo-optation or Coercion
Other Title InformationProtest Targeting and Mass Violence in China
LanguageENG
AuthorTzeng Wei-Feng , Wang Hsin-Hsien ;  Wei-Feng , Tzeng ;  Hsin-Hsien, Wang
Summary / Abstract (Note)How do governmental divisions within an authoritarian state influence protest outcomes? In this article, the authors propose two divergent mechanisms—"co-optation" and "coercion"—to capture the relationships between types of protest target and the violence that results from protest events. The "co-optation" hypothesis proposes that protests against judicial and security branches will be more likely to become violent compared to those against the administrative ones because protesters anticipate no substantial economic return from judicial and security branches that do not have financial resources at hand to distribute. The "coercion" hypothesis proposes that protests targeting judicial and security branches pose a lower risk of mass violence than those targeting administrative ones due to the public's fear of violent crackdowns by judicial or military branches that control the state's coercive means. Analysing a unique data set of protest events in China between 2006 and 2017, the authors find that protests involving administrative divisions are significantly less likely to turn violent when compared to those opposing nongovernmental targets, while protests targeting judicial or security divisions are significantly more likely to involve mass violence. The findings suggest that protest violence in authoritarian regimes is associated with the organisational divisions within an authoritarian government, and the explanation of the relations focuses on whether the branches have the co-optation capacity to allocate substantial economic resources instead of whether the branches control the coercive forces to intimidate the public.
`In' analytical NoteChina: An International Journal Vol. 20, No.4; Nov 2022: p.86-109
Journal SourceChina: An International Journal 2022-12 20, 4
Key WordsMass Violence in China ;  Protest Targeting