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Politicized Medical Dispute Resolution in China: Understanding China

Autor Jie Wu
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 oct 2024
This book investigates the politicization process of social dispute resolution and its unintended consequences, under the context of over 70 percent of China’s public hospitals have experienced hospital violence, with patients acting violently toward medical workers to express anger, protect their rights, or monetary reasons. The examination of interactions between patients, hospitals, and government representatives in China is based on fieldwork conducted in a Chinese mega-city from 2015 to 2017, combining over 700 archival mediation cases, 156 hospital violence cases and their legal outcomes, and 72 in-depth interviews with patients, mediators, and healthcare professionals. It examines the rise of mediation and finds how the party-state utilizes the traditional mediation channel to address emerging social disputes, and the art of persuasion in mediation and finds how political stability and moral concerns influence and shaped their strategies and mediation outcomes. The first-hand data and valuable archival documents help depict citizens’ social dispute resolution process under authoritarianism and reflect another facet of non-electoral political participation under authoritarianism, also enriching the understanding of evolving government strategies in dispute resolution. This book is reader-friendly and could engage a wide and dynamic audience of researchers, healthcare professionals, and readers interested in medical sociology, regional study, or political participation in China.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789819769605
ISBN-10: 9819769604
Ilustrații: XX, 180 p. 15 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Springer
Seria Understanding China

Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore

Cuprins

Introduction.- politicized social dispute resolution in china.- hospital violence.- everyday politics of meditation.- From right protection to monetary bargaining.- Conclusion.

Notă biografică

Dr. Jie WU is assistant professor of political science at the Fudan University. She received Ph.D. from the University of Hong Kong. She obtained her B.A and M.A (Political Science) degrees from Fudan University. Her research interests revolve around health policy, contentious politics, and civil society in China. Her prior research and study were supported by the Swire scholarship and Harvard Yenching Institute.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book investigates the politicization process of social dispute resolution and its unintended consequences, under the context of over 70 percent of China’s public hospitals have experienced hospital violence, with patients acting violently toward medical workers to express anger, protect their rights, or monetary reasons. The examination of interactions between patients, hospitals, and government representatives in China is based on fieldwork conducted in a Chinese mega-city from 2015 to 2017, combining over 700 archival mediation cases, 156 hospital violence cases and their legal outcomes, and 72 in-depth interviews with patients, mediators, and healthcare professionals. It examines the rise of mediation and finds how the party-state utilizes the traditional mediation channel to address emerging social disputes, and the art of persuasion in mediation and finds how political stability and moral concerns influence and shaped their strategies and mediation outcomes. The first-hand data and valuable archival documents help depict citizens’ social dispute resolution process under authoritarianism and reflect another facet of non-electoral political participation under authoritarianism, also enriching the understanding of evolving government strategies in dispute resolution. This book is reader-friendly and could engage a wide and dynamic audience of researchers, healthcare professionals, and readers interested in medical sociology, regional study, or political participation in China.

Caracteristici

Presents the politicization of the dispute resolution process in the authoritarian context Discloses the largely behind-the-scenes struggles between patients, doctors, and mediators in medical dispute resolution Takes intensive case study to examine the tactics of hospital