Protest and Resistance in the Chinese Party State
Sheldon Zhang editor Hank Johnston editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:24th Feb '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Although contemporary China is a repressive state, protests and demonstrations have increased almost tenfold between 2005 and 2015. This is an astounding statistic when one considers that Marxist-Leninist regimes of the past tolerated little or no public dissent. How can protests become so common in an autocratic state? What are the trends of repression and mobilization? This collection helps to answer these compelling questions through in-depth analyses of several Chinese protest movements and state responses. The chapters examine the opportunities and constraints for protest mobilization and explains their importance for understanding contemporary Chinese society.
This timely volume provides us with a detailed overview of the changing landscape of social contention in China. As the book makes clear, after a surge that started in the 1990s and peaked in 2014, protest has declined under Xi Jinping’s increasingly repressive watch. The individual chapters present both a systematic assessment of the development and characteristics of rural and urban protest in China during this period and a set of fascinating accounts of the multi-faceted contentious politics under China’s techno-authoritarian regime— from the petitioning tactics of forced three-gorges-dam migrants to bureaucrat-assisted contention and the extraordinary tenacity of Hongkong’s anti-extradition movement. -- Hanspeter Kriesi, European University Institute
Protest and Resistancein the Chinese Party State provides a long overdue update on the state of contentious politics in China. Drawing from social movement theory and leavened by China-specific events and circumstances, the chapters in this volume provide a rich array of conceptual lenses and analytical approaches to understanding mobilization and protest in China up to and including the Xi Jinping era. The volume helps us appreciate the changes wrought—and continuities preserved—in the era of high tech surveillance and increased political illiberalism in China and within the international authoritarian turn more broadly. -- Andrew Mertha, Johns Hopkins University
ISBN: 9781538165027
Dimensions: 218mm x 156mm x 27mm
Weight: 531g
356 pages