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PROVINCIAL (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   139669


Foreign media coverage and protest outcomes in China: the case of the 2011 Wukan rebellion / Hess, Steve   Article
Hess, Steve Article
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Summary/Abstract By looking at the case of the 2011 Wukan rebellion in Guangdong Province, the following article explores the role played by foreign media in influencing the protest’s ultimate outcome: an intervention from above by provincial authorities in favour of the villagers. Placing Wukan into a four-level model incorporating local, provincial, national, and international dimensions, this article considers howWukan might serve as a model for contention that may influence future acts of popular protest in China in the digital age. It suggests that while appealing directly to foreign media can help claimants increase their leverage over local officials and prompt interventions from above, such actions are likely to modify and accelerate, but not fundamentally transform, existing patterns of localized, community-specific acts of contention seen earlier in the Reform Era.
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2
ID:   143377


Is the price elasticity of demand for coal in China increasing? / Burke, Paul J; Liao, Hua   Article
Burke, Paul J Article
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Summary/Abstract China's dependence on coal is a major contributor to local and global environmental problems. In this paper we estimate the price elasticity of demand for coal in China using a panel of province-level data for 1998–2012. We find that provincial coal demand has become increasingly price elastic. As of 2012 we estimate that this elasticity was in the range − 0.3 to − 0.7 in point estimate terms when responses over two years are considered. The results imply that China's coal market is becoming more suited to price-based approaches to reducing emissions. The elimination of coal consumption subsidies could reduce national coal use and related emissions by around 2%.
Key Words China  Economic Reform  Demand  Coal  Price Elasticity  Price Reform 
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