Bureaucracy, Politics, and Decision Making in Post-Mao China

  Acknowledgments

 expand sectionOne  Introduction: The "Fragmented Authoritarianism" Model and Its Limitations

 collapse sectionPart One  National Issues
 collapse sectionTwo  A Plum for a Peach:Bargaining, Interest, and Bureaucratic Politics in China
 A Comparative Framework For Viewing Bargaining
 The Systematic Causes Of Bargaining Activity
 What Do Leaders Bargain Over?
 expand sectionWater Projects: The Bargaining Process Up Close
 collapse sectionWho Bargains, In What Arenas, And What Strategies Are Employed?
 Who Bargains?
 In What Arenas Does Bargaining Occur?
 expand sectionStrategies for Bargaining and the Necessary Resources
 The Implications Of A Bargaining System View
 expand sectionThree  The Chinese Political System and the Political Strategy of Economic Reform

 collapse sectionPart Two  The Center
 expand sectionFour  The Party Leadership System
 expand sectionFive  Information Flows and Policy Coordination in the Chinese Bureaucracy

 collapse sectionPart Three  Bureaucratic Clusters
 expand sectionSix  Structure and Process in the Chinese Military System
 expand sectionSeven  The Educational Policy Process: A Case Study of Bureaucratic Action in China
 expand sectionEight  The Behavior of Middlemen in the Cadre Retirement Policy Process
 expand sectionNine  Hierarchy and the Bargaining Economy: Government and Enterprise in the Reform Process

 collapse sectionPart Four  Subnational Levels
 expand sectionTen  Territorial Actors as Competitors for Power: The Case of Hubei and Wuhan
 expand sectionEleven  Local Bargaining Relationships and Urban Industrial Finance
 expand sectionTwelve  Urbanizing Rural China: Bureaucratic Authority and Local Autonomy

 expand sectionAppendix
  Bibliography
  Contributors
 expand sectionIndex

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