ABSTRACT

Rapid economic pluralization in East Asia has empowered local and medial groups, and with this change comes the need to rethink usual notions regarding ways in which "democracies" emerge or "citizens" gain more power. Careful examination of current developments in China, Korea, and Southeast Asia show a need for expansion of our understandings of democracy and democratization. This book challenges traditional ways in which political regimes in local as well as national polities are conceived and labeled. It shows from Asian experiences that democracy and its precursors come in more forms than most liberals have yet imagined.

In reviewing recent experiences of countries across East Asia, these chapters show that actual democracies and ostensible democratizations there are less like those in the West than the surprisingly consensual and standard political science of democratization suggests. This book first examines the extreme variation of democracy’s meaning in many Asian states that hold contested elections (South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand). Then it focuses on China. It analyzes a range of grassroots forces driving political change in the People’s Republic, and it finds both accelerators and brakes in China’s political reform process. The contributors show that models for China’s political future exist both within and outside the PRC, including in other East Asian states, in localities and sectors that already are pushing the limits of the powerful, but no longer all-powerful, Chinese party-state.

With contributions from leading academics in the field, Democratization in China, Korea, and Southeast Asia? will be of interest to students and scholars of Asian politics, comparative politics, and democratization more broadly.

chapter 1|16 pages

Diverse routes to democracy

An introduction

part I|68 pages

Variety among Asian democracies and democratizations

chapter 4|15 pages

Strategic hypocrisy

Sovereignty, legitimacy, and commerce in archipelagic Southeast Asia

chapter 5|19 pages

Democracy and inequality in Thailand

The rise of the Red Shirts

part II|88 pages

Constitutional and legal proto-democratic changes in China

chapter 7|16 pages

Why does China's reform start in the provinces?

De facto federalism and its limits

chapter 8|15 pages

Law and democracy in China

A complex relationship

chapter 9|15 pages

Suing the government in China

chapter 10|17 pages

Petitioning as policy making

Chinese rural tax reform

part III|75 pages

Proto-democratization in Chinese civil society

chapter 11|13 pages

The fragmented state in action

chapter 12|12 pages

China invests overseas

Does the strong state help China's outbound investment?

chapter 13|16 pages

All the news, all the politics

Sophisticated propaganda in capitalist-authoritarian China