Contingent Symbiosis and Civil Society in an Authoritarian State: Understanding the Survival of China’s Grassroots NGOs
Chinese University of Hong Kong
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Abstract
In the study of civil society, Tocqueville-inspired research has helped illuminate important connections between associations and democracy, while corporatism has provided a robust framework for understanding officially approved civil society organizations in authoritarian regimes. Yet neither approach accounts for the experiences of ostensibly illegal grassroots nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in an authoritarian state. Drawing on fieldwork in China, I argue that grassroots NGOs can survive in an authoritarian regime when the state is fragmented and when censorship keeps information local. Moreover, grassroots NGOs survive only insofar as they refrain from democratic claims-making and address social…
Citation impact
617
total citations
- FWCI
- 93.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 84
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Grassroots
- Authoritarianism
- Civil society
- State (computer science)
- Democracy
- Political economy
- Political science
- China
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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