Studies of Central–Provincial Relations in the People's Republic of China: A Mid-Term Appraisal
- 1 June 1995
- journal article
- concepts and-methods
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The China Quarterly
- Vol. 142, 487-508
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0305741000035025
Abstract
Spatial aspects of power have been relatively neglected in the field of political science in general, with the notable exception of federalism. Many have argued that the study of political power has generally confined itself to the national level and paid scant attention to the interactions between the central government on the one hand and regional and local authorities on the other. Several tendencies have worked against the flourishing of political research on central-local government relations in the last three decades. First, in methodological terms, the “behavioural revolution” that swept the discipline caused a sudden premature end to the institutional analysis so crucial to central-local government relations. Secondly, in thematic terms, political scientists have been overly preoccupied with central-level processes of decision-making while neglecting the politics of central-local relations. Thirdly, in conceptual terms, the rise of “state” as an encompassing concept was facilitated largely at the expense of complex intra-governmental dynamics.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Beijing's Relations With the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: An Inferential Framework for the Post-1997 ArrangementPacific Affairs, 1995
- The Political Economy of Cropping in Maoist and Dengist China: Hebei Province and Shulu County, 1949–90The China Quarterly, 1994
- Perforated sovereignty: Provincial dynamism and China's foreign tradeThe Pacific Review, 1994
- A New Pattern of Decentralization in ChinaChina Information, 1992
- Whither China?Journal of Contemporary China, 1992
- Conflict Resolution Methods and the Policy ProcessPublic Administration Review, 1989
- Interorganizational Policy Implementation: A Theoretical PerspectivePublic Administration Review, 1984
- Decentralization and the command principle—some lessons from Soviet ExperienceJournal of Comparative Economics, 1981
- Local Autonomy in China During the Cultural Revolution: The Theoretical Uses of an Atypical CaseAmerican Political Science Review, 1976
- National Integration and Political DevelopmentAmerican Political Science Review, 1964