Handbook of Protest and Resistance in China
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Handbook of Protest and Resistance in China
Wright, Teresa
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
06/2019
480
Dura
Inglês
9781786433770
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Contents:
Introduction
Teresa Wright
Part I Overviews
1. Unrest and regime survival
Andrew Wedeman
2. Social unrest in China: a bird's eye view
Christian Goebel
Part II Protest, dissent, and the law
3. Governing political expression: legitimacy and legal culture
Pitman B. Potter
4. Legal advocacy as liberal resistance: the experience of China's human rights lawyers
Eva Pils
5. Mass disputes and China's legal system
Hualing Fu
6. Dissent below the radar: contention in the daily politics of grassroots organizations
Sophia Woodman
Part III Urban labor
7. Labor legislation, workers, and the Chinese state
Jenny Chan and Mark Selden
8. Worker protests and state response in present-day China: trends, characteristics, and new developments, 2011-2016
Lu Zhang
9. China's contentious cab drivers
Manfred Elfstrom
10. Thinking like a state: doing labor activism in South China
Darcy Pan
Part IV Rural residents
11. Collective petitions and local state responses in rural China
Lei Guang and Yang Su
12. Land protests in rural China
Christopher Heurlin
Part V Urban homeowners
13. Homeowners' rights protection actions in China: why some succeed and others fail
Zhiming Sheng
14. Homeowners' activism in urban China: old goals, new strategies
Dragan Pavlicevic, Long Sun, and Zhengxu Wang
Part VI Environmental protest
15. Environmental public interest campaigns: a new phenomenon in China's contentious politics
H. Christoph Steinhardt
16. Networked contention against waste incinerators in China: brokers, linkages and dynamics of diffusion
Bjoern Alpermann and Maria Bondes
17. Possibilities for environmental governance in China? Anti-incinerator activists turned participants in municipal waste management in Guangzhou
Natalie W.M. Wong
18. Anti-nuclear protest in China
Simona A. Grano and Yuheng Zhang
Part VII Religion
19. Religious charity, repurposing, and "claim-staking" resistance: the case of Gospel Rehab
Susan K. McCarthy
20. Informality as Resistance among Catholics and Protestants in China
Marie-Eve Reny
21. Protestant resistance and activism in China's official churches
Carsten Vala
Part VIII Information and communications technologies
22. From mobilization to legitimation: Digital media and the evolving repertoire of contention in contemporary China
Jun Liu
23. Patriotism without state blessing: Chinese cyber nationalists in a predicament
Rongbin Han
24. Microblog dissent and censorship during the 2012 Bo Xilai scandal
Christopher Cairns
Part IX Hong Kong
25. Hong Kong's struggle to define its political future
Suzanne Pepper
26. Dissenting media: post-1997 Hong Kong
Joyce Y.M. Nip
Part X Ethnic minorities
27. The environmental protest movement in Inner Mongolia
Uchralt Otede
28. Ethnic unrest and China's multiple problematic others
Tom Cliff
29. More creative, more international: shifts in Uyghur-related violence
Justin V. Hastings
Index
Introduction
Teresa Wright
Part I Overviews
1. Unrest and regime survival
Andrew Wedeman
2. Social unrest in China: a bird's eye view
Christian Goebel
Part II Protest, dissent, and the law
3. Governing political expression: legitimacy and legal culture
Pitman B. Potter
4. Legal advocacy as liberal resistance: the experience of China's human rights lawyers
Eva Pils
5. Mass disputes and China's legal system
Hualing Fu
6. Dissent below the radar: contention in the daily politics of grassroots organizations
Sophia Woodman
Part III Urban labor
7. Labor legislation, workers, and the Chinese state
Jenny Chan and Mark Selden
8. Worker protests and state response in present-day China: trends, characteristics, and new developments, 2011-2016
Lu Zhang
9. China's contentious cab drivers
Manfred Elfstrom
10. Thinking like a state: doing labor activism in South China
Darcy Pan
Part IV Rural residents
11. Collective petitions and local state responses in rural China
Lei Guang and Yang Su
12. Land protests in rural China
Christopher Heurlin
Part V Urban homeowners
13. Homeowners' rights protection actions in China: why some succeed and others fail
Zhiming Sheng
14. Homeowners' activism in urban China: old goals, new strategies
Dragan Pavlicevic, Long Sun, and Zhengxu Wang
Part VI Environmental protest
15. Environmental public interest campaigns: a new phenomenon in China's contentious politics
H. Christoph Steinhardt
16. Networked contention against waste incinerators in China: brokers, linkages and dynamics of diffusion
Bjoern Alpermann and Maria Bondes
17. Possibilities for environmental governance in China? Anti-incinerator activists turned participants in municipal waste management in Guangzhou
Natalie W.M. Wong
18. Anti-nuclear protest in China
Simona A. Grano and Yuheng Zhang
Part VII Religion
19. Religious charity, repurposing, and "claim-staking" resistance: the case of Gospel Rehab
Susan K. McCarthy
20. Informality as Resistance among Catholics and Protestants in China
Marie-Eve Reny
21. Protestant resistance and activism in China's official churches
Carsten Vala
Part VIII Information and communications technologies
22. From mobilization to legitimation: Digital media and the evolving repertoire of contention in contemporary China
Jun Liu
23. Patriotism without state blessing: Chinese cyber nationalists in a predicament
Rongbin Han
24. Microblog dissent and censorship during the 2012 Bo Xilai scandal
Christopher Cairns
Part IX Hong Kong
25. Hong Kong's struggle to define its political future
Suzanne Pepper
26. Dissenting media: post-1997 Hong Kong
Joyce Y.M. Nip
Part X Ethnic minorities
27. The environmental protest movement in Inner Mongolia
Uchralt Otede
28. Ethnic unrest and China's multiple problematic others
Tom Cliff
29. More creative, more international: shifts in Uyghur-related violence
Justin V. Hastings
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Contents:
Introduction
Teresa Wright
Part I Overviews
1. Unrest and regime survival
Andrew Wedeman
2. Social unrest in China: a bird's eye view
Christian Goebel
Part II Protest, dissent, and the law
3. Governing political expression: legitimacy and legal culture
Pitman B. Potter
4. Legal advocacy as liberal resistance: the experience of China's human rights lawyers
Eva Pils
5. Mass disputes and China's legal system
Hualing Fu
6. Dissent below the radar: contention in the daily politics of grassroots organizations
Sophia Woodman
Part III Urban labor
7. Labor legislation, workers, and the Chinese state
Jenny Chan and Mark Selden
8. Worker protests and state response in present-day China: trends, characteristics, and new developments, 2011-2016
Lu Zhang
9. China's contentious cab drivers
Manfred Elfstrom
10. Thinking like a state: doing labor activism in South China
Darcy Pan
Part IV Rural residents
11. Collective petitions and local state responses in rural China
Lei Guang and Yang Su
12. Land protests in rural China
Christopher Heurlin
Part V Urban homeowners
13. Homeowners' rights protection actions in China: why some succeed and others fail
Zhiming Sheng
14. Homeowners' activism in urban China: old goals, new strategies
Dragan Pavlicevic, Long Sun, and Zhengxu Wang
Part VI Environmental protest
15. Environmental public interest campaigns: a new phenomenon in China's contentious politics
H. Christoph Steinhardt
16. Networked contention against waste incinerators in China: brokers, linkages and dynamics of diffusion
Bjoern Alpermann and Maria Bondes
17. Possibilities for environmental governance in China? Anti-incinerator activists turned participants in municipal waste management in Guangzhou
Natalie W.M. Wong
18. Anti-nuclear protest in China
Simona A. Grano and Yuheng Zhang
Part VII Religion
19. Religious charity, repurposing, and "claim-staking" resistance: the case of Gospel Rehab
Susan K. McCarthy
20. Informality as Resistance among Catholics and Protestants in China
Marie-Eve Reny
21. Protestant resistance and activism in China's official churches
Carsten Vala
Part VIII Information and communications technologies
22. From mobilization to legitimation: Digital media and the evolving repertoire of contention in contemporary China
Jun Liu
23. Patriotism without state blessing: Chinese cyber nationalists in a predicament
Rongbin Han
24. Microblog dissent and censorship during the 2012 Bo Xilai scandal
Christopher Cairns
Part IX Hong Kong
25. Hong Kong's struggle to define its political future
Suzanne Pepper
26. Dissenting media: post-1997 Hong Kong
Joyce Y.M. Nip
Part X Ethnic minorities
27. The environmental protest movement in Inner Mongolia
Uchralt Otede
28. Ethnic unrest and China's multiple problematic others
Tom Cliff
29. More creative, more international: shifts in Uyghur-related violence
Justin V. Hastings
Index
Introduction
Teresa Wright
Part I Overviews
1. Unrest and regime survival
Andrew Wedeman
2. Social unrest in China: a bird's eye view
Christian Goebel
Part II Protest, dissent, and the law
3. Governing political expression: legitimacy and legal culture
Pitman B. Potter
4. Legal advocacy as liberal resistance: the experience of China's human rights lawyers
Eva Pils
5. Mass disputes and China's legal system
Hualing Fu
6. Dissent below the radar: contention in the daily politics of grassroots organizations
Sophia Woodman
Part III Urban labor
7. Labor legislation, workers, and the Chinese state
Jenny Chan and Mark Selden
8. Worker protests and state response in present-day China: trends, characteristics, and new developments, 2011-2016
Lu Zhang
9. China's contentious cab drivers
Manfred Elfstrom
10. Thinking like a state: doing labor activism in South China
Darcy Pan
Part IV Rural residents
11. Collective petitions and local state responses in rural China
Lei Guang and Yang Su
12. Land protests in rural China
Christopher Heurlin
Part V Urban homeowners
13. Homeowners' rights protection actions in China: why some succeed and others fail
Zhiming Sheng
14. Homeowners' activism in urban China: old goals, new strategies
Dragan Pavlicevic, Long Sun, and Zhengxu Wang
Part VI Environmental protest
15. Environmental public interest campaigns: a new phenomenon in China's contentious politics
H. Christoph Steinhardt
16. Networked contention against waste incinerators in China: brokers, linkages and dynamics of diffusion
Bjoern Alpermann and Maria Bondes
17. Possibilities for environmental governance in China? Anti-incinerator activists turned participants in municipal waste management in Guangzhou
Natalie W.M. Wong
18. Anti-nuclear protest in China
Simona A. Grano and Yuheng Zhang
Part VII Religion
19. Religious charity, repurposing, and "claim-staking" resistance: the case of Gospel Rehab
Susan K. McCarthy
20. Informality as Resistance among Catholics and Protestants in China
Marie-Eve Reny
21. Protestant resistance and activism in China's official churches
Carsten Vala
Part VIII Information and communications technologies
22. From mobilization to legitimation: Digital media and the evolving repertoire of contention in contemporary China
Jun Liu
23. Patriotism without state blessing: Chinese cyber nationalists in a predicament
Rongbin Han
24. Microblog dissent and censorship during the 2012 Bo Xilai scandal
Christopher Cairns
Part IX Hong Kong
25. Hong Kong's struggle to define its political future
Suzanne Pepper
26. Dissenting media: post-1997 Hong Kong
Joyce Y.M. Nip
Part X Ethnic minorities
27. The environmental protest movement in Inner Mongolia
Uchralt Otede
28. Ethnic unrest and China's multiple problematic others
Tom Cliff
29. More creative, more international: shifts in Uyghur-related violence
Justin V. Hastings
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.