Yi Nao describes a type of violence displayed in Chinese hospitals which involves organised disturbances led by patients' relatives and/or Yi Nao gangs. Drawing on media reports of Yi Nao, we argue that the phenomenon of Yi Nao transforms hospitals into 'power arenas' in which a struggle over moral and political resources (capital) takes place between patients, Yi Nao gangs, doctors, government agencies, and hospital management. Two interrelated rules that are crucial to understanding the ad hoc local strategies of the actors involved in Yi Nao are examined: the 'publicity rule', and the 'rule of risk-avoidance'. We also argue that the political discourse of 'stability' has been internalised by the officials in the Chinese government and pu...
Objective: To better understand the origins, manifestations and current policy responses to patient–...
Ensuring the safety of staff and patients has become a major problem for hospitals in China. This ar...
Can citizens in an authoritarian country like China influence policy implementation? Two types of sc...
In the 2000s, violent medical disturbance (yinao) is rampant throughout China. Yinao is deeply roote...
China has experienced a surge in medical disputes in recent years, on the streets and in the courts....
Violent confrontations in public hospitals have become a serious and growing problem in the People’s...
In China, patients, their relatives, or organised groups sometimes resort to ‘medical disturbances’ ...
Much research on contentious politics focuses on origins and dynamics of contention or impacts of co...
International audienceChina is currently experiencing an over-utilization of university hospitals an...
In recent years, the number of violent attacks on health professionals in China has rapidly increase...
This paper investigates Chinese doctors’ informal payment, known as red packets, with reference to t...
165. Section on Economic Sociology Paper Session. Illegal MarketsBased on ethnographic studies in pu...
It has been noted that workplace violence most frequently occurs in hospitals. The purpose of this s...
Main Theme: Differences, Inequalities and Sociological ImaginationThis study examines the mechanism ...
Abstract Background Recently, cases of medical disputes and even acts of violence toward physicians ...
Objective: To better understand the origins, manifestations and current policy responses to patient–...
Ensuring the safety of staff and patients has become a major problem for hospitals in China. This ar...
Can citizens in an authoritarian country like China influence policy implementation? Two types of sc...
In the 2000s, violent medical disturbance (yinao) is rampant throughout China. Yinao is deeply roote...
China has experienced a surge in medical disputes in recent years, on the streets and in the courts....
Violent confrontations in public hospitals have become a serious and growing problem in the People’s...
In China, patients, their relatives, or organised groups sometimes resort to ‘medical disturbances’ ...
Much research on contentious politics focuses on origins and dynamics of contention or impacts of co...
International audienceChina is currently experiencing an over-utilization of university hospitals an...
In recent years, the number of violent attacks on health professionals in China has rapidly increase...
This paper investigates Chinese doctors’ informal payment, known as red packets, with reference to t...
165. Section on Economic Sociology Paper Session. Illegal MarketsBased on ethnographic studies in pu...
It has been noted that workplace violence most frequently occurs in hospitals. The purpose of this s...
Main Theme: Differences, Inequalities and Sociological ImaginationThis study examines the mechanism ...
Abstract Background Recently, cases of medical disputes and even acts of violence toward physicians ...
Objective: To better understand the origins, manifestations and current policy responses to patient–...
Ensuring the safety of staff and patients has become a major problem for hospitals in China. This ar...
Can citizens in an authoritarian country like China influence policy implementation? Two types of sc...