Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China.

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Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China

Transcript of Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China.

Page 1: Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China.

Johnson County Community College

Title VI Grant

The Question of Democracy in China

Page 2: Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China.
Page 3: Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China.

The State

“In its sovereign form, and independent political-administrative unit that successfully

•claims the allegiance of a given population•exercises a monopoly on the legitimate use of coercive force•controls the territory inhabited by its citizens or subjects.”

Thomas Magstadt

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China’s Tiered Administrative Structure

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BBC How China is Ruled

Chinese governing structure

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2012-11-05/far-more-important-election-part-1-chinas-political-process

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Challenges for the State:

• Today’s leaders are vested in staying in power

• They need to have stability, especially in the face of rapid development

• They also have the responsibility of thousands of years on their shoulders as the rest of the world scrutinizes China in an historically unprecedented manner

One Solution:Weiwen (maintaining stability)

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Some Problems for the Citizens:

• Weak rule of law

• Censored information flow

• Some government officials working with developers taking land without any sort of process

• Corruption

• Increasing wage disparity

•Pollution

Page 8: Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China.

The State

“In its sovereign form, and independent political-administrative unit that successfully

•claims the allegiance of a given population•exercises a monopoly on the legitimate use of coercive force•controls the territory inhabited by its citizens or subjects.”

Thomas Magstadt

Page 9: Johnson County Community College Title VI Grant The Question of Democracy in China.

Whose Democracy?

“A government held together by the bands of reason only, requires much compromise of opinion; that things even salutary should not be crammed down the throats of dissenting brethren, especially when they may be put into a form to be willingly swallowed, and that a great deal of indulgence is necessary to strengthen habits of harmony and fraternity.”

THOMAS JEFFERSON, letter to Edward Livingston, Apr. 4, 1824

“The marks of a democratic government should be transparency, a response to popular will, and a scientific approach.”Controversial 1988 CCTV program criticizing the imperial era (and by extension the Mao era)

Feedback Loops !

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Governmental System of Citizens’ Direct Participation Includes:

Social consultation and dialogue

Writing letters and petitions (xin fang)

Workers and staff congress (at work committees)

Mass autonomy in bottom-level areas (local committees)

Ballot voting at the village level (soon at the urban neighborhood level)

Feedback Loops

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Informal Feedback Loops between Citizens and the Government:

Media and internet

Muckraking

Street protests (has a long cultural history in China)

NGO and GONGO activity

Individual government agencies’ websites informing the public and seeking their opinions

Feedback Loops

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Democracy is Messy:

“Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage”H.L. Menken

But We’re in this Together:

“Democracy's worst fault is that its leaders are likely to reflect the faults and virtues of their constituents.”

ROBERT A. HEINLEIN, Stranger in a Strange Land