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COMMUNIST YOUTH LEAGUE (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   168019


Low-cost Corporatism?: the Chinese Communist Youth League and its Sub-organisations in post-Mao China / Doyon, Jérôme   Journal Article
Doyon, Jérôme Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The Communist Youth League has developed a network of sub-organisations to expand its reach at minimum cost. It exemplifies the low-cost corporatism model. Following this model, mass organisations maintain a corporatist relationship with the Party while diversifying their activities through structures they supervise. These structures also provide them with additional material and human resources. In this configuration, the Communist Youth League maintains an equilibrium between dependence on the Party and attractiveness to young people. However, reforms put forward under Xi Jinping challenge this fragile equilibrium by strengthening Party control over the League and its sub-organisations.
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2
ID:   114853


PLA delegates to the 18th party congress: a brief analysis / Ranade, Jayadeva   Journal Article
Ranade, Jayadeva Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Key Words PLA  China  Tibet  Xinjiang  Chinese Communist Party  PLAAF 
PLA Navy  Bo Xilai  Chengdu Military Region  Communist Youth League 
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3
ID:   168020


Ram Union : Emergence of an International NGO Supported by the Party-state / Jourda, Emmanuel   Journal Article
Jourda, Emmanuel Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The Ram Union is a non-profit social organisation established in 2003 in Zhejiang Province. Its transformation from a local entity into an international NGO tells us about the methods implemented by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to accompany the development of popular associations or minjian, which appear to be external to the Party but which in fact are fully sponsored by it. Studying such organisations is a complex matter, as they appear to act in a benevolent and apolitical manner, while being completely integrated within the political and social apparatus of the Party-state (Youth League, volunteers, United Front, ministry of Civil Affairs, etc.). The historical trajectory of the Ram Union thus gives us insight into the CCP’s overlooked strategy of hybridisation, involving mass organisations that came out of the revolutionary period and charitable groups embodying modern Chinese society. This strategy is designed to occupy the social arena and forestall the emergence of an autonomous Chinese civil society in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) or among the Chinese diaspora overseas.
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4
ID:   175566


Strength of a Weak Organization: the Communist Youth League as a Path to Power in Post-Mao China / Doyon, Jérôme   Journal Article
Doyon, Jérôme Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract How can a weak organization be a path to power? The Chinese Communist Youth League (CYL) lacks autonomy and coherence yet it is seen as the cradle for one of the main factions within the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). To understand this tension, I provide a novel account of the role played by the CYL in the recruitment of leading cadres since the 1980s. Against explanations based on factional struggles, I argue that the rise of CYL-affiliated cadres is a by-product of the organization's weakness. As the Party appoints CYL heads, CCP leaders, at various levels and at different points in time, have used the League to accelerate the promotion of their protégés. For years, there has been little incentive for Party bosses to dismantle this promotion path. However, in his bid to consolidate his power, Xi Jinping has weakened this channel so that it may not be used by potential rivals.
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