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MANAGING IRREGULAR PETITIONS IN CHINA: TWO TYPES OF SOCIAL CONTROL STRATEGY WITHIN THE AUTHORITARIAN REGIME

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 November 2018

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Abstract

This paper uses Province A and City T as case studies to explore the strategies used by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) for managing citizens’ “irregular letters and visits” (irregular petitions) and the logic behind them. We believe that the local officials use both “hard” and “soft” measures to exercise control over these activities. The soft measures include persuasion and negotiation aimed at getting petitioners to abandon their irregular petitions. The hard measures involve the use of the coercive power of the state to compel the petitioners to return home. During important political meetings and holiday periods, both of which are popular times for petitioning, the CCP is more likely to take a hard approach to resolve serious problems and maintain stability. In normal times, it generally uses less costly soft tricks. These two social control strategies are utilized alternately by the CCP to maintain social stability and guarantee its regime survival.

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Article
Copyright
Copyright © East Asia Institute 2018 
Figure 0

Figure 1 Two Kinds of Measures for Handling Irregular Petitions

Figure 1

Figure 2 Mechanism for Handling Irregular Petitions

Note: The responsible persons handling irregular petitions during normal and special times are in the bold-line boxes. The responsible persons of the letters and visits joint office and the working team are in the dotted-line boxes.
Figure 2

Figure 3 Statistical Data on City T's Measures for Handling Irregular Petitions (2014–2016)

Note: The unbroken line shows the proportion of hard measures taken by the CCP; the dotted line shows the proportion of soft tricks. The bold lines indicate an important conference period and the holiday period.Data from: “2014–2016 nian T shi jinjing shangfang renyuan qingkuang tongjibiao” [The Statistical Table of City T's Petitioners Entering Beijing, 2014–2016], consulted by the authors at City T's Beijing office, March 15, 2017.
Figure 3

Table 1 Irregular Petitioning in Beijing by Citizens of City T (2014–2016)