Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China

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Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China. / Liu, Chunrong.

I: Chinese Political Science Review, Bind 2, Nr. 2, 06.2017, s. 221-236.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Liu, C 2017, 'Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China', Chinese Political Science Review, bind 2, nr. 2, s. 221-236. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41111-017-0060-4

APA

Liu, C. (2017). Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China. Chinese Political Science Review, 2(2), 221-236. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41111-017-0060-4

Vancouver

Liu C. Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China. Chinese Political Science Review. 2017 jun.;2(2):221-236. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41111-017-0060-4

Author

Liu, Chunrong. / Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China. I: Chinese Political Science Review. 2017 ; Bind 2, Nr. 2. s. 221-236.

Bibtex

@article{1294ba09f37c47ca8624079f2676cd59,
title = "Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China",
abstract = "Coercive capacity matters for keeping stability of authoritarian regime. Yet governing conflict is more than deployment of coercion. State response to contentious politics can be classified by the form of power it uses to direct challenging behaviors. This paper suggests a typology of conflict processing mechanism and uses it to illustrate the diversity of China's domestic security strategy and detect new signs of conflict management beyond coercive actions. The focus is an emerging social engagement approach-a conceptually distinct process through which contentious behavior is transformed by intermediate agencies. Despite its limits in handling large-scale conflicts, this approach of conflict resolution is able to contribute to regime stability from below by demobilizing and depoliticizing local and issue-based contentions.",
author = "Chunrong Liu",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1007/s41111-017-0060-4",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
pages = "221--236",
journal = "Chinese Political Science Review",
issn = "2365-4244",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Beyond Coercion: The New Politics of Conflict Processing in China

AU - Liu, Chunrong

PY - 2017/6

Y1 - 2017/6

N2 - Coercive capacity matters for keeping stability of authoritarian regime. Yet governing conflict is more than deployment of coercion. State response to contentious politics can be classified by the form of power it uses to direct challenging behaviors. This paper suggests a typology of conflict processing mechanism and uses it to illustrate the diversity of China's domestic security strategy and detect new signs of conflict management beyond coercive actions. The focus is an emerging social engagement approach-a conceptually distinct process through which contentious behavior is transformed by intermediate agencies. Despite its limits in handling large-scale conflicts, this approach of conflict resolution is able to contribute to regime stability from below by demobilizing and depoliticizing local and issue-based contentions.

AB - Coercive capacity matters for keeping stability of authoritarian regime. Yet governing conflict is more than deployment of coercion. State response to contentious politics can be classified by the form of power it uses to direct challenging behaviors. This paper suggests a typology of conflict processing mechanism and uses it to illustrate the diversity of China's domestic security strategy and detect new signs of conflict management beyond coercive actions. The focus is an emerging social engagement approach-a conceptually distinct process through which contentious behavior is transformed by intermediate agencies. Despite its limits in handling large-scale conflicts, this approach of conflict resolution is able to contribute to regime stability from below by demobilizing and depoliticizing local and issue-based contentions.

UR - http://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/beyond-coercion-new-politics-conflict-processing-china

U2 - 10.1007/s41111-017-0060-4

DO - 10.1007/s41111-017-0060-4

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

SP - 221

EP - 236

JO - Chinese Political Science Review

JF - Chinese Political Science Review

SN - 2365-4244

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 235475375