Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ndmmz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-01T01:28:02.063Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Deliberate Differentiation by the Chinese State: Outsourcing Responsibility for Governance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 May 2019

Taiyi Sun*
Affiliation:
Christopher Newport University
*
Email: tsun@cnu.edu (corresponding author).

Abstract

Do authoritarian governments’ responses towards different civil society organizations (CSOs) reflect policy differentiations? Building on the existing literature of graduated control, diversification of civil society, and consultative authoritarianism, this paper utilizes an online field experiment,1 and interviews with government officials and CSO leaders to demonstrate that local governments have the tendencies to intentionally treat different CSOs with different policy responses, referred to as “deliberate differentiation” in this paper. However, contrary to what the existing literature would suggest, this study reveals that at the local level, such differentiation is driven more by the state's interest in extracting productivity and outsourcing responsibility for the provision of public goods and less by the state's need to acquire information from CSOs, including politically sensitive advocacy groups.

摘要

威权政府对不同民间社会组织 (CSO) 的回应是否反映了政策差异?在现有的分级控制,民间社会多元化和咨询性威权主义的文献的基础上, 本文利用在线实验和对政府官员和民间社会组织领导人的访谈, 证明地方政府倾向于有针对性地用不同的政策对待不同的组织, 本文将此现象称为 “刻意分化” (deliberate differentiation)。然而, 与现有文献的观点不同, 本研究表明, 在地方层面, 这种差异化更多地被国家提取生产力和外包公共产品供给责任的兴趣所驱动, 而不主要因为国家从民间社会组织 (包括政治敏感的团体) 获取信息的需要。

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © SOAS University of London 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

The sentence in italics is the only difference between the control and treatment emails. The treatment emails include it; the control emails do not.

1

IRB approval was received on 10 April 2014 in accordance with CFR 46.101(b)(2) at the author's institution.

References

AONGOMPS. 2017. “Statistics on foreign NGO registration and official events documentation for the first nine months of 2017 in China.” Gongyi cishan zhoukan (Public Welfare and Charity Weekly) 37, http://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/WtIakQgj0sNNQ4wkfFRLfw. Accessed 12 October 2017.Google Scholar
Arai, Mahmood, and Thoursie, Peter Skogman. 2009. “Renouncing personal names: an empirical examination of surname change and earnings.” Journal of Labor Economics 27(1), 127147.Google Scholar
Bertrand, Marianne, and Mullainathan, Sendhil. 2004. “Are Emily and Greg more employable than Lakisha and Jamal: a field experiment on labor market discrimination.” American Economic Review 94(4), 9911013.Google Scholar
Bowers, Jake, Fredrickson, Mark and Hansen, Ben. 2014. “Randomization inference tools.” CRAN project, https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/RItools/RItools.pdf. Accessed 12 March 2019.Google Scholar
Broockman, David E. 2013. “Advance blacks’ interests: a field experiment manipulating political incentives.” American Journal of Political Science 57(3), 521536.Google Scholar
Butler, Daniel M., and Broockman, David E. 2011. “Do politicians racially discriminate against constituents: a field experiment on state legislators.” American Journal of Political Science 55(3), 463477.Google Scholar
Chen, Jidong, Pan, Jennifer and Xu, Yiqing. 2016. “Sources of authoritarian responsiveness: a field experiment in China.” American Journal of Political Science 60(2), 383400.Google Scholar
Chen, Xi. 2013. “China at the tipping point? The rising cost of stability.” Journal of Democracy 24(1), 5764.Google Scholar
Chinese National Bureau of Statistics. 2009. Social Service Development Statistical Annual Report 2008, http://www.mca.gov.cn/article/sj/tjgb/200906/200906150317629.shtml. Accessed 12 March 2019.Google Scholar
Chinese National Bureau of Statistics. 2017. Social Service Development Statistical Annual Report 2016, http://www.mca.gov.cn/article/sj/tjgb/201708/20170815005382.shtml. Accessed 12 March 2019.Google Scholar
Correll, Shelley J., Benard, Stephen and Paik, In. 2007. “Is there a motherhood penalty?American Journal of Sociology 112(5), 12971339.Google Scholar
Dickson, Bruce J. 2003. Red Capitalists in China: The Party, Private Entrepreneurs, and the Prospects for Political Change. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dimitrov, Martin K. 2014. “What the party wanted to know: citizen complaints as a ‘barometer of public opinion’ in communist Bulgaria.” East European Politics and Societies and Cultures 28(2), 271295.Google Scholar
Distelhorst, Greg and Hou, Yue. 2013. “Ingroup bias in official behavior: a national field experiment in China.” Quarterly Journal of Political Science 9(2), 203230.Google Scholar
Edin, Maria. 2003. “State capacity and local agent control in China: CCP cadre management from a township perspective.” The China Quarterly 173, 3552.Google Scholar
Fewsmith, Joseph. 2013. The Logic and Limits of Political Reform in China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fu, Diana. 2016. “Disguised collective action in China.” Comparative Political Studies 50(4), 499527.Google Scholar
Gallagher, Mary E. 2004. “China: the limits of civil society in a late Leninist state.” In Alagappa, Muthiah (ed.), Civil Society and Political Change in Asia: Expanding and Contracting Democratic Space. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 419452.Google Scholar
Hartford, Kathleen. 2005. “Dear mayor: online communications with local governments in Hangzhou and Nanjing.” China Information 19(2), 217260.Google Scholar
He, Baogang, and Thogersen, Stig. 2010. “Giving the people a voice? Experiments with consultative authoritarian institutions in China.” Journal of Contemporary China 19(66), 675692.Google Scholar
Hildebrandt, Timothy. 2013. Social Organizations and the Authoritarian State in China. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kang, Xiaoguang, and Han, Heng. 2008. “Graduated controls: the state-society relationship in contemporary China.” Modern China 34(1), 3655.Google Scholar
King, Gary, Pan, Jennifer and Roberts, Margaret E.. 2013. “How censorship in China allows government criticism but silences collective expression.” American Political Science Review 107(2), 118.Google Scholar
King, Gary, Pan, Jennifer and Roberts, Margaret E.. 2014. “Reverse engineering Chinese censorship: randomized experimentation and participant observation.” Science 345(6199), 110.Google Scholar
Li, Liguo. 2013. “The direct registration of four types of social organizations: halting unnecessary procedures.” The Ministry of Civil Affairs of the People's Republic of China, http://news.sina.com.cn/c/2013-12-06/025428898717.shtml. Accessed 12 March 2019.Google Scholar
Lorentzen, Peter L. 2013. “Regularizing rioting: permitting public protest in an authoritarian regime.” Quarterly Journal of Political Science 8, 127158.Google Scholar
Luehrmann, Laura M. 2003. “Facing citizen complaints in China, 1951–1996.” Asian Survey 43(5), 845866.10.1525/as.2003.43.5.845Google Scholar
, Xiaobo, and Landry, Pierre F.. 2014. “Show me the money: interjurisdiction political competition and fiscal extraction in China.” American Political Science Review 108(3), 706722.Google Scholar
McClendon, Gwyneth H. 2015. “Race and responsiveness: an experiment with South African politicians.” Journal of Experimental Political Science 3(1), 6074.Google Scholar
Magaloni, Beatriz, and Wallace, Jeremy. 2008. “Citizen loyalty, mass protest and authoritarian survival.” Paper presented at the conference on “Dictatorships: Their Governance and Social Consequences,” Stanford University, California, 25–26 April 2008, http://bit.ly/1lTCb75. Accessed 12 March 2019.Google Scholar
Meng, Tianguang, Pan, Jennifer and Yang, Ping. 2014. “Conditional receptivity to citizen participation: evidence from a survey experiment in China.Comparative Political Studies 50(4), 399433.Google Scholar
Mertha, Andrew. 2009. “‘Fragmented authoritarianism 2.0’: political pluralization in the Chinese policy process,The China Quarterly 200, 9951012.Google Scholar
Ministry of Civil Affairs of the People's Republic of China. 2013. Social Service Development Report, http://www.chinanpo.gov.cn/159641/attachment-159641.html. Accessed 12 March 2019.Google Scholar
Nathan, Andrew J. 1997. China's Transition. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Nathan, Andrew J. 2003. “Authoritarian resilience.” Journal of Democracy 14(1), 617.Google Scholar
National People's Congress of the People's Republic of China. 2015. The Overseas NGO Management Law of the People's Republic of China (Second Draft), http://www.npc.gov.cn/npc/xinwen/lfgz/flca/2015-05/05/content_1935666.htm. See translation in English at http://chinadevelopmentbrief.cn/articles/cdb-english-translation-of-the-overseas-ngo-management-law-second-draft/. Accessed 12 March 2019.Google Scholar
Neumark, David, Bank, Roy J. and Van Nort, Kyle D.. 1996. “Sex discrimination in restaurant hiring: an audit study.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 111(3), 915941.Google Scholar
O'Brien, Kevin, and Li, Lianjiang. 2006. Rightful Resistance in the Chinese Countryside. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
O'Brien, Kevin, J., 2013. “Rightful resistance revisited.” Journal of Peasant Studies 40(6), 1051–62.Google Scholar
Ostergaard, Clemens. 1989. “Citizens, groups, and nascent civil society in China: towards an understanding of the 1989 student demonstrations.” China Information 4(2), 2841.Google Scholar
Perry, Elizabeth. 2002. Challenging the Mandate of Heaven: Social Protest and State Power in China. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Perry, Elizabeth. 2009. “A new rights consciousness?Journal of Democracy 20(3), 1720.Google Scholar
Rosenbaum, Paul, R., 2010. Design of Observational Studies, Springer Series in Statistics. New York: Springer Verlag.Google Scholar
Simon, Karla W. 2013. Civil Society in China: The Legal Framework from Ancient Times to the ‘New Reform Era.’ New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Steinhardt, H. Christoph, and Wu, Fengshi. 2015. “In the name of the public: environmental protest and the changing landscape of popular contention in China.” The China Journal 75, 6182.Google Scholar
Sullivan, Lawrence. 1990. “The emergence of civil society in China, spring 1989.” In Saich, Tony (ed.), The Chinese People's Movement: Perspectives on Spring 1989. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 126144.Google Scholar
Sun, Taiyi. 2017. “Earthquakes and the typologies of state-society relations in China,” China Information 31(3), 304326.Google Scholar
Teets, Jessica. 2014. Civil Society under Authoritarianism: The China Model. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Teets, Jessica. 2015. “The test of a civilization: social management and the future of philanthropy in China.” Paper presented at the conference on “Chinese Philanthropy: Past, Present and Future,” Fudan University, Shanghai, 9–10 June 2015.Google Scholar
Truex, Rory. 2014. “Consultative authoritarianism and its limits.” Comparative Political Studies 50(3), 329361.Google Scholar
Tsou, Tang. 1986. The Cultural Revolution and Post-Mao Reforms: A Historical Perspective. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Wallace, Jeremy L. 2015. “Information politics in dictatorships.” In Scott, Robert and Kosslyn, Stephen (eds.), Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An Interdisciplinary, Searchable, and Linkable Resource. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley and Sons, 111.Google Scholar
Yang, Guobin. 2003. “The internet and civil society in China: a preliminary assessment.” Journal of Contemporary China 12(36), 453475.Google Scholar
Yinger, John, 1986, “Measuring racial discrimination with fair housing audits: caught in the act.The American Economic Review 76(5), 881–93.Google Scholar
Zhang, Junhua. 2002. “Will the government ‘serve’ the people: the development of Chinese e-government,New Media & Society 4(2), 163184.Google Scholar
Zhou, Xueguang. 1993. “Unorganized interests and collective action in Communist China,American Sociological Review, 58(1), 5473.Google Scholar