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Published bySybil Lang Modified over 9 years ago
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Elections designed to give the party- state greater legitimacy Party controls elections to prevent dissent Direct, secret-ballot elections at local level › Found most common at the village level (could be a façade) › Indirect elections at other levels
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CCP allows the existence of eight "democratic" parties. › China Democratic League-intellectuals › Chinese Party for the Public Interest-overseas experts Membership is small and has very little power Important advisory role to the party leaders and generate support for CCP policies › Meet at CPPCC during National People’s Congress (and attend NPC as nonvoting deputies)
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CCP CHINESE GOVERNMENT PLA PARALLEL HIERARCHY Three parallel hierarchies Principle of dual role China's policy making is governed more directly by factions and personal relationships (guanxi)
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Organized hierarchically by levels The party has a separate constitution from the government's constitution of 1982, and its central bodies are: › National Party Congress › Central Committee › Politburo/Standing Committee
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Three branches - a legislature, an executive, and a judiciary. People's National Congress The National People's Congress choose the President and Vice President of China, but there is only one party-sponsored candidate for each position Executive/Bureaucracy The President and Vice President The Premier Bureaucracy
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Chinese for patron-client relationships › Think nomenclatura in the CCP Helps to build contacts and power › Can determine Politburo membership among other things
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President and Premier (Prime Minister) › President is head of state with little constitutional power, but is sometimes the General Secretary of CCP › Prime Minister is head of State Council, or ministers, and is in charge of “departments” of government
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They are elected for 5-year terms by National Peoples Congress, nominated by CCP’s National Party Congress They also serve on Central Military Commission, which oversees the PLA The CCP’s leader is the general secretary and he is in charge of bureaucracy, or Secretariat
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Think of Russian Matrioshka dolls Top legislative body is National Peoples Congress › 3,000 members chosen by provincial peoples congresses across the country › They meet in Beijing once a year for a couple of weeks to “legislate” for 1 billion+ people Pass laws; amend Constitution, On paper very powerful, but checked by Party
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The National Peoples Congress chooses a Central Committee of 200 that meets every 2 months to conduct business Inside this is the Central Committee’s Standing Committee which functions every day
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Parallel structure The National Party Congress is main representative body of CCP, not people › Has 2,000 delegates › Select 150-200 people chosen for Central Committee › It chooses a Politburo of 12 people to run party’s day to day business › Many of these people work in Secretariat so Politburo chooses a Standing Committee of 6 headed by General Secretary (Thus merging executive to legislative)
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Standing Committee of Politburo includes president and prime minister, plus closest associates, and the party legislative “branch” and party executive is joined with government executive
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State Council › Government Ministers and Premier carry out the decisions made by National Peoples Congress (or Politburo) › Chinese bureaucrats are paralled by party members assigned to their ministries Leadership small groups are informal groups that link other ministers to coordinate policymaking and implementation › In spite of centralization, provincial and local ministries have had to adapt national policies to local needs
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China has a 4-tiered " people's cour t" system › Handle criminal cases and government working on civil law codes “People's Procuratorate " › Investigates suspected illegal activity Criminal justice is swift and harsh (capital punishment is a bullet in the back of the head) Human Rights organizations criticize China › Not a rule of law system, rather a rule by law system
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"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.“ - Mao The People's Liberation Army encompasses all of the country's ground, air, and naval armed services. Important influence on politics and policy. The second half of Mao's famous quote above is less often quoted: "Our principle is that the party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the party." This propaganda poster represents life in the "Red Army" - the military under Mao before the People's Republic of China was formed in 1949.
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During the 1970s and 80s the government didn’t have money to modernize Army so fended for itself › It ran hotels, construction companies, factories that produced pirate copies of everything, satellite dishes By 1990s government began controlling the Army and its activities
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Ministry of State Security › Combats espionage and gathers intelligence People’s Armed Police › Guards public buildings and quell unrest Ministry of Public Security › Maintenance of law and order, investigations, surveillance › Maintain labor reform camps › No habeas corpus rights
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Economic reforms › Corruption › Iron rice bowl broken › High unemployment › Inequality of classes › Floating population › Environmental implications Demand for political power and civil liberties? Will contact through trade mean that China will become more like their trading partners?
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Hong Kong Special Economic Zones (SEZs).
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China trades with Taiwan, but the PRC views Taiwan as part of China and Taiwan does not › But they want to benefit from its trade
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Democratic reforms can be seen in these ways: › Some input from the National People's Congress is accepted by the Politburo › More emphasis is placed on laws and legal procedures › Village elections are now semi-competitive, with choices of candidates and some freedom from the party's control
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Hu was Chosen as General Secretary of the Communist Party of China on November 15, 2002 Became President of the People's Republic of China on March 15, 2003, following his election by the National People's Congress, thus replacing his predecessor Jing Zemin. He is the first party chief to have joined the Communist Party after the Revolution over 50 years ago Claims to have a photographic memory and tends to have moderate views.
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