This chapter provides a framework for understanding changing levels of power concentration and how they might be linked with authoritarian resilience. It looks at elite level dynamics in China and discusses elements of power concentration including personalization, administrative centralization, and state control over economic assets. There is a general trend of deepening autocratization during Xi Jinping’s regime. Institutional arrangements in existing institutions such as Party bodies and the People’s Liberation Army, innovation of new institutions, and purges of opponents show a clear trend of power concentration. Before the Xi era, the central government shared power with regional administrations and China’s level of fiscal decentraliza...
Many studies of government in China either simply describe the political institutions or else focus,...
This is the abstract of the dissertation, to which these replication data belong: In a large numb...
<p>This article investigates the sources of public demand for democratic institutions under authorit...
Authoritarian resilience is a complex phenomenon, which a new wave of research helps us to understan...
Authoritarian resilience is a complex phenomenon, which a new wave of research helps us to understan...
This chapter provides a framework for understanding changing levels of power concentration and how t...
With a membership of more than 73 million, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is the largest and poss...
This work proposes a new theory of authoritarian regimes: responsive authoritarianism. Most existing...
Chapter one develops a dynamic model to investigate the paradox of the Chinese state-society relatio...
Authoritarian governments may face serious uncertainties when dealing with popular resistance becaus...
This article investigates how China's economic cooperation affects authoritarian persistence elsewhe...
Having been a stable authoritarian regime for more than seven decades, China is an excellent example...
Why are some autocracies more durable than others? In analyzing the institutional mechanisms that su...
In a large number of non-democratic countries, the power of the government rests upon the effective ...
The remarkable political durability and economic accomplishments of China under the Chinese Communis...
Many studies of government in China either simply describe the political institutions or else focus,...
This is the abstract of the dissertation, to which these replication data belong: In a large numb...
<p>This article investigates the sources of public demand for democratic institutions under authorit...
Authoritarian resilience is a complex phenomenon, which a new wave of research helps us to understan...
Authoritarian resilience is a complex phenomenon, which a new wave of research helps us to understan...
This chapter provides a framework for understanding changing levels of power concentration and how t...
With a membership of more than 73 million, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is the largest and poss...
This work proposes a new theory of authoritarian regimes: responsive authoritarianism. Most existing...
Chapter one develops a dynamic model to investigate the paradox of the Chinese state-society relatio...
Authoritarian governments may face serious uncertainties when dealing with popular resistance becaus...
This article investigates how China's economic cooperation affects authoritarian persistence elsewhe...
Having been a stable authoritarian regime for more than seven decades, China is an excellent example...
Why are some autocracies more durable than others? In analyzing the institutional mechanisms that su...
In a large number of non-democratic countries, the power of the government rests upon the effective ...
The remarkable political durability and economic accomplishments of China under the Chinese Communis...
Many studies of government in China either simply describe the political institutions or else focus,...
This is the abstract of the dissertation, to which these replication data belong: In a large numb...
<p>This article investigates the sources of public demand for democratic institutions under authorit...