Author:
Deng Yanhua,O'Brien Kevin J.
Abstract
AbstractChinese local officials frequently employ relational repression to demobilize protesters. When popular action occurs, they investigate activists' social ties, locate individuals who might be willing to help stop the protest, assemble a work team and dispatch it to conduct thought work. Work team members are then expected to use their personal influence to persuade relatives, friends and fellow townspeople to stand down. Those who fail are subject to punishment, including suspension of salary, removal from office and prosecution. Relational repression sometimes works. When local authorities have considerable say over work team members and bonds with protesters are strong, relational repression can help demobilize protesters and halt popular action. Even if relational repression does not end a protest entirely, it can limit its length and scope by reducing tension at times of high strain and providing a channel for negotiation. Often, however, as in a 2005 environmental protest in Zhejiang, insufficiently tight ties and limited concern about consequences creates a commitment deficit, partly because thought workers recognize their ineffectiveness with many protesters and partly because they anticipate little or no punishment for failing to demobilize anyone other than a close relative. The practice and effectiveness of relational, “soft” repression in China casts light on how social ties can demobilize as well as mobilize contention and ways in which state and social power can be combined to serve state ends.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference67 articles.
1. Voc.com.cn. 2012. “Kuasheng ‘qianli biqian’ de beihou: zhulian chaiqian de qiangchai luoji” (Behind trans-provincial, long-distance pressure: the coercive logic of demolition by implicating homeowners' relatives), http://www.voc.com.cn/article/201203/201203150854522859.html. Accessed 1 May 2012.
2. Anatomy of Regime Repression in China: Timing, Enforcement Institutions, and Target Selection in Banning the Falungong, July 1999
3. Protest Leadership in Rural China
4. Shan Changyu . 2005. “Wo shi qingli zhuxi feifa dajian zhupeng shou qunzhong weidu” (“Local officials were besieged by the masses when clearing illegally erected tents”), Dongyang ribao, 11 April.
5. Wang Zhiqiu . 2006. “Youshi qing zhao ‘laoxiang jingcha’” (Please contact “home town policemen” if you are in trouble), Renmin ribao, 15 May.
Cited by
195 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献