Liang, Jia
Description
Despite the growing research on policy lobbying in China, little
is known about Chinese research universities’ perspectives,
strategies and interactions with the government in their efforts
to influence higher education policies and advance their
individual and collective interests. Their lobbying practices
have long been hidden from the public view and difficult to
research. Yet, the elite Chinese research universities have
accumulated capacity to exert...[Show more] influence, and their discreet
lobbying of government institutions has in fact become prevalent
and is one of the most significant parts of
university–government relations.
This study investigates how the leading Chinese research
universities interact with the central government to influence
policies of crucial importance to their operations. In
particular, it explores the strategies and forms of agency the
institutions develop to exploit the loopholes of a fragmented
central bureaucracy, and identifies the key factors and ‘rules
of the game’ that shape their lobbying behaviour and define
their patterns of interaction with the state. It asks how
successful they are vis-à-vis the authoritarian state in a tight
regulatory environment, and the potential implications of their
activism for the current political structure.
My study relies on a unique set of empirical evidence which
includes 48 personal interviews with university top leaders and
executives from a range of leading research universities, as well
as with government officials. An in-depth analysis of these
interviews and other previously inaccessible materials yields
remarkable findings. It reveals two salient factors framing the
university–state interactions: the need and capacity to
monitor, navigate and penetrate an opaque central power structure
within the state bureaucracy and the regulatory environment of
the higher education sector; and the contingencies that create
strategic opportunities and/or major crises. When the central
power structure and regulatory environment are rigid, taking
advantage of or reacting to any contingencies becomes necessary
for any effective actions.
‘Lobbying authoritarianism’ is the result of the hybrid
nature of universities in China’s political system: they need
autonomy to modernise their operations and gain international and
domestic prestige while at the same time remaining dependent on
the government’s ideology, financial control, and political
will. Their strategic and contingent activism is unlikely to
lead, singlehandedly, to any significant structural changes.
Yet, through lobbying, these institutions have pushed policy
boundaries and engineered incremental modifications to the system
demonstrating a remarkable capacity to produce specific
opportunities and influence individual decisions. Their lobbying
strategies may also produce an enduring impact on policymaking,
increasing officials’ reliance and acceptance of bottom-up
inputs and facilitating a more inclusive and rational approach in
the bureaucracy. These gradual steps may altogether lead to a
more vibrant education sector, and ultimately, an evolution of
the system and a more open society.
This original work advances our understanding about the practices
of lobbying authoritarianism and of university behaviour in this
field. It also provides new insights and facilitates future
research on the major phenomena of the changing role and nature
of the central state and of the role and nature of the elite
research universities in China.
Keywords: policy, lobbying, policy influencing, lobby group,
political strategies, research universities, higher education
lobbying, higher education policy, Chinese governance, Chinese
political system, Chinese state, state-society relations
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