Context: Over the last two decades a growing body of research has shown authoritarian regimes trying to increase their legitimacy by providing public goods. But there has so far been very little research on whether or not these regimes are successful. Methods: This article analyzes data from a 2012–2013 nationally representative survey in China to examine whether health care provision bolsters the communist regime’s legitimacy. Using multivariate ordinal logistic regression, we test whether having public health insurance and being satisfied with the health care system are associated with separate measures of the People’s Republic of China’s regime legitimacy: support for “our form of government” (which we call “system support”) and polit...
Over the past two decades, protests and violence have become increasingly common ways for Chinese pa...
How trust affects health-care utilization is not well-understood, especially in low- and middle- inc...
This study presents a contextual explanation of regime support by arguing that although an individua...
Autocrats may try to generate regime support in order to remain in power, but do they get the result...
Objective: To identify factors and covariates associated with health care system satisfaction in Chi...
Contemporary China observers tend to agree over the positive role played by post-maoist market-orien...
Autocrats typically seek public support on the basis of economic growth-promotion and redistribution...
Background: Monitoring the equity of government healthcare subsidies (GHS) is critical for evaluatin...
This paper is concerned with the management of health system changes aimed at substantially increasi...
In recent years, non-democratic regimes have introduced a host of participatory forums. This paper a...
This is a study of political legitimacy in the context of China. It assumes that the social contract...
This thesis identifies and analyzes current problems in the healthcare market in China. Although man...
China has long represented a puzzle for scholars of democracy, who view political trust as an import...
A question of great interest to China watchers is whether or not central mandates are successfully i...
China has exploded onto the world economy over the past few decades and is undergoing rapid transfor...
Over the past two decades, protests and violence have become increasingly common ways for Chinese pa...
How trust affects health-care utilization is not well-understood, especially in low- and middle- inc...
This study presents a contextual explanation of regime support by arguing that although an individua...
Autocrats may try to generate regime support in order to remain in power, but do they get the result...
Objective: To identify factors and covariates associated with health care system satisfaction in Chi...
Contemporary China observers tend to agree over the positive role played by post-maoist market-orien...
Autocrats typically seek public support on the basis of economic growth-promotion and redistribution...
Background: Monitoring the equity of government healthcare subsidies (GHS) is critical for evaluatin...
This paper is concerned with the management of health system changes aimed at substantially increasi...
In recent years, non-democratic regimes have introduced a host of participatory forums. This paper a...
This is a study of political legitimacy in the context of China. It assumes that the social contract...
This thesis identifies and analyzes current problems in the healthcare market in China. Although man...
China has long represented a puzzle for scholars of democracy, who view political trust as an import...
A question of great interest to China watchers is whether or not central mandates are successfully i...
China has exploded onto the world economy over the past few decades and is undergoing rapid transfor...
Over the past two decades, protests and violence have become increasingly common ways for Chinese pa...
How trust affects health-care utilization is not well-understood, especially in low- and middle- inc...
This study presents a contextual explanation of regime support by arguing that although an individua...