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ID190406
Title ProperWho Commands the Gun? Mobilization and Use of China's Armed Police
LanguageENG
AuthorWuthnow, Joel
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recent reforms to China's People's Armed Police have changed the balance of authority between central and local officials, continuing a pattern of reduced local control and granting more authority to Xi Jinping in his role as Central Military Commission chairman. The new system, however, attempts to balance central control with provisions that allow local officials down to the prefecture level to take command in some circumstances. This system intends to allow for rapid mobilization in cases of social unrest or natural disasters, although a review of emergency response plans and other Chinese sources indicates uneven implementation. The risk is that centralization could slow emergency response, although the effects will depend on the nature of civil–military coordination at different levels. The paper describes new legal authorities, assesses implementation and challenges, and reaches conclusions about the implications for Chinese political control and emergency response.
`In' analytical NoteChina Quarterly , No.253; Mar 2023: p.74 - 89
Journal SourceChina Quarterly No 253
Key WordsInternal Security ;  China ;  Emergency Response ;  Xi Jinping ;  People's Armed Police


 
 
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