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The Failure of China's Democratic Reforms (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,637
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The Failure of China's Democratic Reforms (Paperback)
Series: Challenges Facing Chinese Political Development
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In its propaganda, the Chinese Communist Party does not deny the
value of "democracy", but it insists that democracy in China can be
only "socialist democracy with Chinese characteristics". The most
essential nature of such "democracy" is that it is under the
single-party system and it excludes multi-party politics and
competitive elections. In recent years, "Chinese democracy" has won
more support because of achievements the party has made in
developing economy. This raises a question: does this "efficient"
authoritarian political system in China, even if it is not
democratic, deserve applause because it can facilitate economic
development? The party also insists that it is "democratic". But,
is the party's theory of "democracy" compatible with western
democracy? Since 1998, the party has organized some political
reforms, such as "direct elections" for township executives,
"direct elections" for township party secretaries, township party
congress reform and "deliberative democracy" experiments, while
maintaining single-party politics. In the party's propaganda, some
of these reforms have become party achievements in improving
"socialist democracy with Chinese characteristics". In addition to
these four kinds of party-organized reforms, another "reform"
originated from the grassroots, the participation of independent
candidates in a few local people's congress elections. This book
examines these five local political reforms. It demonstrates that
the four reforms instigated and organized by the party were tightly
controlled and manipulated by the party. Although some reform
measures may possibly liberalize parts of China's political
mechanism, it is highly unlikely that the four reforms will
eventually lead to political democratization in China. In the fifth
"reform", which was motivated from outside the bureaucratic system,
the party took drastic measures to repress the political
participation of grassroots power. As a result, nearly all
independent candidates in the local people's congress elections
failed in their attempts to gain office. The prospects for this
"reform" are also poor. The book argues that all five reforms have
failed and that none will lead to China's democratization in the
near future. The book concludes that the party's authoritarian
regime in China is by nature anti-democratic and that so-called
"socialist democracy with Chinese characteristics" is not
democratic.
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