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CHENGGUAN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   118685


Interactions between Chengguan and street vendors in Beijing: how the unpopularity of an administration affects relations with the public / Caron, Emmanuel   Journal Article
Caron, Emmanuel Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Despite the existence of an administration - the chengguan - one of whose main roles is to control illegal street vendors, the latter are still very numerous in Beijing. This paradox can be partly explained by a form of tolerance on the part of the chengguan in response to the public resistance to their actions, which is linked to the conflictive nature of their relationship with the street vendors. This tolerance appears to be erratic, but is actually based on recurrent distinctions made by this administration. However, the informal, revocable, and ultimately unpredictable character of the control exercised by the chengguan has resulted in a continuation of the conflictive nature of their interactions with street vendors.
Key Words China  Beijing  Chengguan  Street Vendors 
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2
ID:   146513


Street politics: street vendors and urban governance in China / Hanser, Amy   Journal Article
Hanser, Amy Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Conflicts between urban street vendors and city regulators have become a common urban sight in Chinese cities today. This paper considers how visions of modern urban streets and sidewalks have helped to generate increasingly restrictive policies on street vending and spurred new forms of urban regulation and policing. While mostly an everyday routine of Chinese city life, the resulting vendor–chengguan conflicts dramatize state power in public and carry the latent danger of crowd violence in response. In particular, aggressive policing of highly visible city streets can at times produce a volatile “politics of the street” involving episodes of vendor resistance and even dramatic expressions of bystander solidarity which challenge these street-level expressions of state power.
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