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ID152031
Title ProperPowers of Xi Jinping
LanguageENG
AuthorBrown, Kerry
Summary / Abstract (Note)Since becoming head of the Communist Party in China in late 2012, Xi Jinping has accrued an impressive raft of titles. He has been compared to the founder of the regime, Mao Zedong, and is seen by some as sitting at the centre of a network of different power sources. But is power as personalised as this model makes out in contemporary China, with all its complexity and diversity? And can one person really rule the continental sized country in this paternalistic way? This article argues that Xi's powers are intrinsically linked with the organisation that he leads and which his power is sourced in – the Party itself. Far from him being the emperor of modern China, it is the Communist Party which acts as the all-seeing, all-powerful ruler. In this model, Xi is its servant, not its master.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Affairs Vol. 48, No.1; Mar 2017: p.17-26
Journal SourceAsian Affairs Vol: 48 No 1
Key WordsMarxism ;  Mao Zedong ;  Communist Party of China ;  Leninism ;  Xi Jinping


 
 
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