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CHINESE PEOPLE’S LIBERATION ARMY (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   170775


Chinese military innovation in the AI revolution / Kania, Elsa B   Journal Article
Kania, Elsa B Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) anticipates that today’s advances in emerging technologies, particularly artificial intelligence, could catalyse a new military revolution. Elsa B Kania explores how, fearing surprise and seeking strategic opportunity, the PLA is actively pursuing military innovation and exploring new paradigms of military power.
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2
ID:   160697


Political control and military autonomy: reexamining the Chinese People’s Liberation Army / Ledberg, Sofia K   Journal Article
Ledberg, Sofia K Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The first part of this article discusses the most common theoretical and analytical approaches to the study of political control over the armed forces in China. It argues that the focus on professionalism and professionalization at the level of the military institution that is common in previous studies has certain limitations when analyzing Chinese civil–military relations. Against this background, the second part of the article suggests an alternative approach that places the Chinese officer corps and its professional autonomy at the center of analysis. Its benefit is demonstrated in a case study of quality control at China’s top three military education institutes. The study shows that autonomy and direct political control varies, which indicate a need for more nuanced discussions about military professionalization in China.
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3
ID:   148213


Reclaiming the party’s control of the gun: bringing civilian authority back in China’s civil-military relations / Char, James   Journal Article
Char, James Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Since emerging as China’s top leader following the 18th Party Congress, Xi Jinping has moved swiftly to consolidate his formal authority as Central Military Commission chairman over the Chinese People’s Liberation Army. In redressing the civil-military imbalance wrought by Dengist economic reforms, the commander-in-chief has combined institutional mechanisms with the use of fear to impose authoritative civilian control over the military. This paper proposes that a combination of changes to the Chinese strategic environment has contributed to Xi’s utility of the anti-corruption campaign to purge the regime’s coercive forces of its previous underpinnings, and advances that the war on military malfeasance has given rise to a new set of dynamics in civil-military relations in post-Reform China.
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