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ID132946
Title ProperAuthoritarian parochialism
Other Title Informationlocal congressional representation in China
LanguageENG
AuthorManion, Melanie
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article draws on evidence from loosely structured interviews and data from original surveys of 5,130 delegates in township, county and municipal congresses to argue that congressional representation unfolds as authoritarian parochialism in China. It makes three new arguments. First, popularly elected local congresses that once only mechanically stood in for the Chinese mass public, through demographically descriptive and politically symbolic representation, now work as substantively representative institutions. Chinese local congressmen and women view themselves and act as "delegates," not Burkean trustees or Leninist party agents. Second, this congressional representation is not commonly expressed in the quintessentially legislative activities familiar in other regime types. Rather, it is an extra-legislative variant of pork-barrel politics: parochial activity by delegates to deliver targeted public goods to the geographic constituency. Third, this authoritarian parochialism is due to institutional arrangements and regime priorities, some common to single-party dictatorships and some distinct to Chinese authoritarianism.
`In' analytical NoteChina Quarterly Vol. , No.218; Jun.2014: p.311-338
Journal SourceChina Quarterly Vol. , No.218; Jun.2014: p.311-338
Key WordsChina ;  Representation ;  Congress ;  Pork-Barrel Politics ;  Authoritarian Parochialism ;  Chinese Authoritarianism ;  Regime ;  Municipal Congresses ;  Congressional Representation


 
 
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