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ID181933
Title ProperParty Building as Institutional Bricolage
Other Title Information Asserting Authority at the Business Frontier
LanguageENG
AuthorKoss, Daniel
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is expanding its organizational infrastructure in the private sector, revealing the dynamics of CCP-style institutional change. Party building follows a distinct version of adaptive governance. Hesitant to rely on innovative tools alone, organizers productively tinker with traditional and disparate elements. Grassroots Party organs, sanctified by their venerable history, are redeployed – initially for modest purposes that fall short of their original revolutionary potential. The Party's surge in private-sector firms was triggered by technocrats overhauling Leninist systems to reconnect to Party members; the search for a broader mission came later. To empower CCP organs in companies, organizers use tactical precedents ranging from incentives to negotiations around Party financing, and membership discipline. Combining tactics from different eras, overseas Party building deploys old organizational arrangements to new ends, whereas digitization gives time-worn procedures a second life. The inclination for institutional bricolage is a deeply rooted hallmark of innovation in Chinese statecraft.
`In' analytical NoteChina Quarterly Vol.248 , S1; Nov 2021: p.222 - 243
Journal SourceChina Quarterly No 248 S
Key WordsChinese Communist Party ;  Institutional Change ;  Historical Legacies ;  Party Building ;  Adaptive Governance


 
 
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