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Book Chapter: Poised to take the helm: Rising stars and the transition to the fourth generation

TitlePoised to take the helm: Rising stars and the transition to the fourth generation
Authors
Issue Date2015
Citation
China's Leadership in the 21st Century: The Rise of the Fourth Generation, 2015, p. 21-44 How to Cite?
AbstractCentral leaders have had to use indirect methods of assessing changing public expectations from a growing plurality of social strata. As society continues to outgrow the Leninist bureaucratic structures intended to contain and control it, central authorities are uncertain how to cope with the new constraints on their authority created by commercialization and cultural impact from the outside. China’s leaders in the 1990s addressed the challenge with Band-Aids-marginal readjustments to shore up the existing social and political structures for co-opting and controlling society. The focus on internal Party reform at the Sixteenth Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Congress is viewed as a substitute for systemic structural change. Recent sociological studies of the relationship between State and society in China, would suggest that new Chinese leaders will face some very difficult historic choices in social policy and political reform.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/335342

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorLi, Cheng-
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-17T08:25:05Z-
dc.date.available2023-11-17T08:25:05Z-
dc.date.issued2015-
dc.identifier.citationChina's Leadership in the 21st Century: The Rise of the Fourth Generation, 2015, p. 21-44-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/335342-
dc.description.abstractCentral leaders have had to use indirect methods of assessing changing public expectations from a growing plurality of social strata. As society continues to outgrow the Leninist bureaucratic structures intended to contain and control it, central authorities are uncertain how to cope with the new constraints on their authority created by commercialization and cultural impact from the outside. China’s leaders in the 1990s addressed the challenge with Band-Aids-marginal readjustments to shore up the existing social and political structures for co-opting and controlling society. The focus on internal Party reform at the Sixteenth Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Congress is viewed as a substitute for systemic structural change. Recent sociological studies of the relationship between State and society in China, would suggest that new Chinese leaders will face some very difficult historic choices in social policy and political reform.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofChina's Leadership in the 21st Century: The Rise of the Fourth Generation-
dc.titlePoised to take the helm: Rising stars and the transition to the fourth generation-
dc.typeBook_Chapter-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.4324/9781315705798-10-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85074899803-
dc.identifier.spage21-
dc.identifier.epage44-

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