Deliberating Governance in Chinese Urban Communities
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Tang, Beibei
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Volume Title
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Australian National University
Abstract
This article examines the mechanisms of conflict resolution by public deliberation in Chinese
urban residential communities. The analysis focuses on the interactions between three
key actors of community life: Residents’ Committees (as the agent of the state), residents,
and their representative organizations. Based on empirical data from three types of urban
communities, the article finds that deliberation is more effective in communities where the
power of Residents’ Committees over residents is weak, and deliberation also works better
in communities with strong resident representatives who are able to mobilize information
flows and to shape public reasoning. The findings suggest that, on the one hand, the governance
structure of Chinese urban residential communities provides space for informal,
unstructured public deliberation; on the other hand, deliberation also meets obstacles and
dilemmas associated with representation, coordination and fostering understanding across
social and economic divisions.
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The China Journal
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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