Legislatures in authoritarian regimes are commonly understood either as a potential means of democratization or as mere window dressing. Zhongyuan Wang’s fascinating study of local legislatures in China presents a different argument. Township and county congresses, he suggests, can also play an important role in authoritarian resilience. By managing elections and mobilizing representation, the Chinese Communist party-state leverages legislatures for its own benefit. This is an original and informed study that offers valuable insight on the sources of regime strength in China and other authoritarian regimes.
— Elizabeth J. Perry, Harvard University
This is a path-breaking book— and not just for those interested in the politics of the PRC. Wang manages to wrangle out of a comparison between the introduction and conduct of elections in mainland China and Taiwan, a convincing explanation for an enduring puzzle: why do single-party regimes bother to hold elections? And, he adds, what determines their longer-term consequences for their survival or transformation?
— Philippe C. Schmitter, European University Institute
Remodeling Democracy is a brilliant and meticulously researched study of how China’s local-level democratic institutions negotiate the shrinking gap between genuine political representation and Chinese Communist Party guidance and control. This is a must-read for anyone wishing to understand the realities of China’s political system beyond the easy stereotype of illiberal authoritarian rule.
— Frank Pieke, Leiden University
The major findings of this book contribute not only to the understanding of the party-state-society relations in China and its resilience to its political system, but also to politics at the local level and in general. Thus, it is conducive to the understanding of both the field of Chinese politics and the field of comparative politics.
— Thomas Heberer, University of Duisburg-Essen
How does representational authoritarianism work in present-day China? How does the Communist Party remold the representation function of local congresses, hence recalibrating the relationship between state and society? To what extent do managed elections and mobilized representation bring about regime legitimacy, and can they serve as an alternative model of representation in contemporary political systems? These are some of the core questions raised in Zhongyuan Wang's thought-provoking new book.
— Gunter Schubert, University of Tuebingen