Authoritarian Containment: Public Security Bureaus and Protestant House Churches in Urban China
Autor Marie-Eve Renyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 noi 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190698089
ISBN-10: 019069808X
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 239 x 155 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 019069808X
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 239 x 155 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This book is clearly argued and based on ample evidence. Whoever is interested in comparative politics and contemporary relationships between religion and state will benefit from reading it.
Authoritarian Containment offers a timely and insightful investigation of the Chinese government's toleration of Protestant Christianity in metropolitan cities. The major takeaway of this book is its conceptual clarity. Marie-Eve Reny should be praised for explaining the diverse linkages between religious governance and authoritarian resilience in China's single-party system...In short, Authoritarian Containment is theoretically sophisticated and well written, and its findings should appeal to Chinese historians, political scientists, and religious scholars.
In sum, the book indeed clearly illustrates an important strategy used by an authoritarian regime toward specific undesirable religious groups...the book undoubtedly provides a useful, well-argued analysis of how containment is used by an authoritarian regime to deal with unwelcome religious groups.
Between violent repression and generous co-optation lies a fascinating gray area of state-society interactions in authoritarian regimes. Nobody has charted these everyday interactions more intimately or impressively than Marie-Eve Reny does in Authoritarian Containment. Whether one wants to learn more about the politics of religion in China specifically, or how dictatorships manage unwelcome pluralism more generally, this book delivers." -Dan Slater, Professor of Political Science and Director of the Weiser Center for Emerging Democracies (WCED), University of Michigan
Why do autocratic states actors tolerate informal religious organizations? Why do China's local governments tolerate informal Protestant churches? Based on thorough fieldwork, Marie-Eve Reny proposes an answer both simple and profound. The conditional and bounded toleration of informal religious institutions is a rational choice to contain them and undermine their threat against the regime. This fascinating study makes a major contribution to the studies of religion and politics, and authoritarian regime resilience.>" -Juan Wang, McGill University
Marie-Eve Reny forces us to rethink the nature of state-society relations in authoritarian regimes. The literature on authoritarianism has typically focused on the ways in which autocratic actors either coopt, or repress autonomous civil society activity. Through an analysis of Chinese state policies towards unregistered Protestant house churches, Reny by contrast shows that authoritarian regimes may also adopt a strategy of containment. Drawing on extensive interviews and observation, Reny offers us a fresh and unparalleled view of the subtle and informal workings of contemporary authoritarian rule." -Lucan Ahmad Way, Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto
Authoritarian Containment offers a timely and insightful investigation of the Chinese government's toleration of Protestant Christianity in metropolitan cities. The major takeaway of this book is its conceptual clarity. Marie-Eve Reny should be praised for explaining the diverse linkages between religious governance and authoritarian resilience in China's single-party system...In short, Authoritarian Containment is theoretically sophisticated and well written, and its findings should appeal to Chinese historians, political scientists, and religious scholars.
In sum, the book indeed clearly illustrates an important strategy used by an authoritarian regime toward specific undesirable religious groups...the book undoubtedly provides a useful, well-argued analysis of how containment is used by an authoritarian regime to deal with unwelcome religious groups.
Between violent repression and generous co-optation lies a fascinating gray area of state-society interactions in authoritarian regimes. Nobody has charted these everyday interactions more intimately or impressively than Marie-Eve Reny does in Authoritarian Containment. Whether one wants to learn more about the politics of religion in China specifically, or how dictatorships manage unwelcome pluralism more generally, this book delivers." -Dan Slater, Professor of Political Science and Director of the Weiser Center for Emerging Democracies (WCED), University of Michigan
Why do autocratic states actors tolerate informal religious organizations? Why do China's local governments tolerate informal Protestant churches? Based on thorough fieldwork, Marie-Eve Reny proposes an answer both simple and profound. The conditional and bounded toleration of informal religious institutions is a rational choice to contain them and undermine their threat against the regime. This fascinating study makes a major contribution to the studies of religion and politics, and authoritarian regime resilience.>" -Juan Wang, McGill University
Marie-Eve Reny forces us to rethink the nature of state-society relations in authoritarian regimes. The literature on authoritarianism has typically focused on the ways in which autocratic actors either coopt, or repress autonomous civil society activity. Through an analysis of Chinese state policies towards unregistered Protestant house churches, Reny by contrast shows that authoritarian regimes may also adopt a strategy of containment. Drawing on extensive interviews and observation, Reny offers us a fresh and unparalleled view of the subtle and informal workings of contemporary authoritarian rule." -Lucan Ahmad Way, Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto
Notă biografică
Marie-Eve Reny is Assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Université de Montréal since June 2013. Her work primarily centers on the comparative study of authoritarian regimes, with a special interest for China.