The rise of the land revenue regime in China, characterized by land dispossession in the countryside and land redevelopment in the city, has sparked numerous protests. This study draws attention to the paradox that the regime has helped to mitigate labour unrest, at least temporarily, in China’s Rustbelt, where millions of workers were laid-off in the 1990s. Based on field research in Anshan, Liaoning province, and data from other cities in the Rustbelt, this article shows that laid-off workers’ protests persisted much longer than previously thought, largely owing to a lack of local fiscal resources to meet workers’ demands. Only with the growing revenue from land sales in the recent decade has the local government finally been able to ease...
Why do we observe mass protest in authoritarian regimes? How can we explain subnational variation wi...
<p>This article investigates the sources of public demand for democratic institutions under authorit...
This article provides a new analysis of Chinese labor politics. Most scholars suggest that China has...
Why do some episodes of protest in rural China succeed while others fail? Many scholars have offered...
Conflicts over rural land expropriation, which have intensified over the past decade in China, pose ...
What are the foundations of China's rise? This dissertation argues that two central mechanisms are f...
Scholarship has tended to see that rising protests in authoritarian states signal the decline of a r...
Rural protests and mass incidents are crucial to our understanding of China s state-society relation...
This paper investigates the relationships among industrial upgrading, mid-aged peasants ’ non-farm e...
Despite a proliferation of studies of the micro-level dynamics of protests and petitions against lan...
When do political elites interested in maximizing gains adopt efficiency-enhancing reforms that may ...
Grassroots contention has become one of major challenges that the Chinese Communist Party has to co...
Studies on protests, demonstrations, strikes and other forms of social unrest in China overwhelmingl...
While China’s economic reforms have produced undeniably positive outcomes, a rapid increase in popul...
Land expropriation and peasant resistance in China have been widely noted, but the many cases in whi...
Why do we observe mass protest in authoritarian regimes? How can we explain subnational variation wi...
<p>This article investigates the sources of public demand for democratic institutions under authorit...
This article provides a new analysis of Chinese labor politics. Most scholars suggest that China has...
Why do some episodes of protest in rural China succeed while others fail? Many scholars have offered...
Conflicts over rural land expropriation, which have intensified over the past decade in China, pose ...
What are the foundations of China's rise? This dissertation argues that two central mechanisms are f...
Scholarship has tended to see that rising protests in authoritarian states signal the decline of a r...
Rural protests and mass incidents are crucial to our understanding of China s state-society relation...
This paper investigates the relationships among industrial upgrading, mid-aged peasants ’ non-farm e...
Despite a proliferation of studies of the micro-level dynamics of protests and petitions against lan...
When do political elites interested in maximizing gains adopt efficiency-enhancing reforms that may ...
Grassroots contention has become one of major challenges that the Chinese Communist Party has to co...
Studies on protests, demonstrations, strikes and other forms of social unrest in China overwhelmingl...
While China’s economic reforms have produced undeniably positive outcomes, a rapid increase in popul...
Land expropriation and peasant resistance in China have been widely noted, but the many cases in whi...
Why do we observe mass protest in authoritarian regimes? How can we explain subnational variation wi...
<p>This article investigates the sources of public demand for democratic institutions under authorit...
This article provides a new analysis of Chinese labor politics. Most scholars suggest that China has...