>
Local People's Congresses in China: Development and Transition

Local People's Congresses in China: Development and Transition

  • £5.29
  • Save £56


Young Nam Cho
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 12/4/2008
EAN 9780521515627, ISBN10: 0521515629

Hardcover, 206 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm
Language: English

Cho addresses two key questions in this comprehensive study of local people's congresses at both provincial and county levels. First, what kinds of roles did Chinese local legislatures actually perform in local politics, and to what degree? Second, how have Chinese local legislatures become main political forces, and what kinds of development strategies have they employed, along with the Chinese Communist Party and governments? Dismissing the outdated conclusion that Chinese local legislatures are nothing but 'rubber stamps', Cho's in-depth research in Shanghai, Guangdong, and Tianjin areas proves that they have strengthened lawmaking and supervisory roles and thereby become important political forces in local politics. Moreover, these legislatures have employed very sophisticated development strategies targeting different objectives: getting the support of the party, cooperating with governments, and aggressively engaging in courts.

1. Introduction
local legislatures in Chinese politics
2. The politics of lawmaking with Chinese characteristics
3. Supervising governments and development strategies
4. Supervising courts and the development of new state organs
5. Role fulfillment of deputies to local legislatures
6. Symbiosis between local legislatures and social organizations
7. The development of local legislatures and political leadership
8. Conclusion
the development of local legislatures and political development in China.

'For those who think China is not undergoing political reform, Young Nam Cho’s book will come as a revelation. Richly detailed and based on years of careful research, Cho’s study shows the rising influence of local legislatures and their relations with the Communist Party and local governments should. It should help reshape our understanding of local politics in China.' Bruce Dickson, George Washington University