Complete List of Institute Reports Release Date: August 1998 Get Adobe PDF version of the full report HTML version of the full report |
Peaceworks 23 Muddling toward Democracy Anne F. Thurston Among the most significant political reforms implemented by the Chinese government since 1989 is the introduction of competitive elections into rural villages. This study, based largely on fieldwork conducted between 1995 and 1997, examines China's efforts to bring competitive elections to the country's rural areas and attempts to explain why local democracy has proved more successful in some places than in others. By focusing on the realities and complexities of rural China, the study also attempts to reintroduce China-as-China into public dialogue. The basis for village elections is a law promulgated in 1987 by the National People's Congress, China's nominal legislature, which specifies that village leaders be directly elected by the villagers themselves for terms of three years. Elected village leaders are not government officials. Rather, they are transmission belts between the government and the villagers, reporting popular opinion and proposals to the government, helping to maintain social order, and mediating civil disputes. The election law is less the result of popular demand than of an unusual alliance between conservative party leaders, who believe that democratic elections will help maintain stability and thus preserve party authority, and younger government reformers, who have been influenced both by Western political values and by the success of democratic reform in Taiwan. Peaceworks reports are available in PDF format. In order to access the reports you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader. |
Home | Jobs | FAQs | Contact Us | Directions | Privacy Policy | Site Map
United States Institute of Peace -- 1200 17th Street NW -- Washington, DC 20036
(202) 457-1700 (phone) -- (202) 429-6063 (fax)
Send Feedback