Protest Leadership and Repertoire: A Comparative Analysis of Peasant Protest in Hunan in the 1990s
In: Journal of current Chinese affairs, Band 42, Heft 2, S. 167-194
Abstract
Based on detailed ethnographic fieldwork, this paper compares two cases of peasant protest against heavy taxes and fees in a northern Hunan county in the 1990s. It argues that peasant protest did not arise spontaneously. Rather, it erupted when leaders emerged who used central policy documents on lowering peasant taxes and fees to mobilise peasants. Protest leaders were articulate and public-spirited peasants who had received political training from the local party-state. Furthermore, the number of leaders, their education level, and their relationship with the local party-state explain why the repertoire and the scope of the two protests varied. Protests led by less educated veteran Communist Party cadres tended to be milder and smaller than those led by better-educated peasants more distant from the local party-state. This paper helps us to understand the process of peasant mobilisation in contemporary China and explains why peasant protest varies across cases. Adapted from the source document.
Themen
Sprachen
Englisch
Verlag
Institute of Asian Studies/GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg Germany
ISSN: 1868-1026
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