This book explores how China's political system responds to crisis.
A crisis is an episode whose impact cannot be controlled merely by
astute on-the-ground incident management, particularly in cases
involving widespread doubt about the legitimacy of established
policy paradigms or the political order as a whole. Crisis can
create "political windows" for advocacy groups challenging
established policies in pluralist democracies. The political battle
between competing definitions of an uncertain and ambiguous
situation among the various actors provides them with
crisis-induced opportunity space for dramatic policy change.
However, the process of crisis-induced policy change, mainly by
crisis framing, in non-west regimes like China has not been
adequately addressed. As China's leadership foregrounds legitimacy
in "victory" over COVID-19, and a new era of climate change
disasters begins, this dynamic model of crisis and recuperation
will offer food for thought for scholars of Chinese and global
politics.
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