Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T20:40:33.633Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2023

Denise Sienli van der Kamp
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Clean Air at What Cost?
The Rise of Blunt Force Regulation in China
, pp. 202 - 224
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alkon, M., & Wang, E. H. (2018). Pollution lowers support for China’s regime: quasi-experimental evidence from Beijing. The Journal of Politics, 80(1), 327–31.Google Scholar
Almond, D., Du, X., Karplus, V. J., & Zhang, S. (2021). Ambiguous air pollution effects of China’s COVID-19 lock-down. AEA Papers and Proceedings, 111, 376–80.Google Scholar
Amengual, M. (2013). Pollution in the garden of the Argentine republic: building state capacity to escape from chaotic regulation. Politics & Society, 41, 527–60.Google Scholar
Amengual, M. (2016). Politicized Enforcement in Argentina: Labor and Environmental Regulation. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Amengual, M., & Dargent, E. (2020). The social determinants of enforcement.  In Brinks, Daniel M., Levitsky, Steven, and Murillo, María Victoria, eds., The Politics of Institutional Weakness in Latin America. Cambridge University Press, pp. 161–82.Google Scholar
Ang, Y. Y. (2016). How China Escaped the Poverty Trap. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Ang, Y. Y. (2017). Beyond Weber: conceptualizing an alternative ideal type of bureaucracy in developing contexts. Regulation & Governance, 11(3), 282–98.Google Scholar
Ang, Y. Y. (2020). China’s Gilded Age: The Paradox of Economic Boom and Vast Corruption. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ang, Y. Y., & Jia, N. (2014). Perverse complementarity: political connections and the use of courts among private firms in China. The Journal of Politics, 76(2), 318–32.Google Scholar
Auerbach, A. M. (2020). Demanding Development: The Politics of Public Goods Provision in India’s Urban Slums. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Auyero, J., & Swistun, D. A. (2009). Flammable: Environmental Suffering in an Argentine Shantytown. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ayres, I., & Braithwaite, J. (1992). Responsive Regulation: Transcending the Deregulation Debate. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Badran, A. (2013). Understanding the Egyptian regulatory state: independent regulators in theory and practice. In Dubash, N. K. and Morgan, B., eds., The Rise of the Regulatory State of the South: Infrastructure and Development in Emerging Economies. Oxford University Press, pp. 5374.Google Scholar
Baker, S. R., Bloom, N., & Davis, S. J. (2016). Measuring economic policy uncertainty. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 131(4), 1593–636.Google Scholar
Bakken, B. (2005). Crime, Punishment, and Policing in China (Asia/Pacific/perspectives). Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Bardach, E., & Kagan, R. A. (1982). Going by the Book: The Problem of Regulatory Unreasonableness. Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Bardhan, P., & Mookherjee, D. (2006). Decentralisation and accountability in infrastructure delivery in developing countries. The Economic Journal, 116(508), 101–27.Google Scholar
Bates, R. H. (2005). Markets and States in Tropical Africa: The Political Basis of Agricultural Policies. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Beeson, M. (2010). The coming of environmental authoritarianism. Environmental Politics, 19(2), 276–94.Google Scholar
Bell, R., & Narain, U. (2005). Who changed Delhi’s air? The roles of the court and the executive in environmental decisionmaking. Discussion Papers dp-05-48, Resources For the Future. https://ideas.repec.org/p/rff/dpaper/dp-05-48.html.Google Scholar
Bernstein, T. P., & , X. (2000). Taxation without representation: peasants, the central and the local states in reform China. The China Quarterly, 163, 742–63.Google Scholar
Berwick, E., & Christia, F. (2018). State capacity redux: integrating classical and experimental contributions to an enduring debate. Annual Review of Political Science, 21(1), 7191.Google Scholar
Biddulph, S., Cooney, S., & Zhu, Y. (2012). Rule of law with Chinese characteristics: the role of campaigns in lawmaking. Law & Policy, 34(4), 373401.Google Scholar
Birney, M. (2014). Decentralization and veiled corruption under China’s “rule of mandates.World Development, 53, 5567.Google Scholar
Black, J. (2010). Risk-Based Regulation: Choices, Practices and Lessons Being Learnt. OECD.Google Scholar
Blackman, A. (2000). Informal sector pollution control: what policy options do we have?World Development28(12), 2067–82.Google Scholar
Blackman, A. (2009). Alternative pollution control policies in developing countries: informal, informational, and voluntary.  Discussion Papers dp-09-14-efd, Resources For the Future.Google Scholar
Blackman, A., Afsah, S., & Ratunanda, D. (2004). How do public disclosure pollution control programs work? Evidence from IndonesiaHuman Ecology Review, 11, 235–46.Google Scholar
Blair, R. A., Morse, B. S., & Tsai, L. L. (2017). Public health and public trust: survey evidence from the Ebola virus disease epidemic in Liberia. Social Science & Medicine, 172, 8997.Google Scholar
Blecher, M. J. (2002). Hegemony and workers’ politics in China. The China Quarterly, 170, 283303.Google Scholar
Braithwaite, J. (2006). Responsive regulation and developing economies. World Development, 34(5), 884–98.Google Scholar
Brinks, D. M., Levitsky, S., & Murillo, M. V. (2019). Understanding Institutional Weakness: Power and Design in Latin American Institutions. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Brownlee, J. (2007). Authoritarianism in an Age of Democratization. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cai, Y. (2010). Collective Resistance in China: Why Popular Protests Succeed or Fail. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Cai, Y. (2014). Managing group interests in China. Political Science Quarterly, 129(1), 107–31.Google Scholar
Cao, X., Deng, Q., Li, X., & Shao, Z. (2021). Fine me if you can: fixed asset intensity and enforcement of environmental regulations in China. Regulation & Governance. https://doi.org/10.1111/rego.12406.Google Scholar
Cao, X., Kostka, G., & Xu, X. (2019). Environmental political business cycles: the case of PM2.5 air pollution in Chinese prefectures. Environmental Science & Policy, 93, 92100.Google Scholar
Carrigan, C., & Coglianese, C. (2011). The politics of regulation: from new institutionalism to new governance. Annual Review of Political Science, 14(1), 107–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Centeno, M. A., Kohli, A., Yashar, D. J., & Mistree, D. (2017). States in the Developing World. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chan, A. T., & O’Brien, K. J. (2019). Phantom services: deflecting migrant workers in China. The China Journal, 81, 103–22.Google Scholar
Chan, C. K. C., & Ngai, P. (2009). The making of a new working class? A study of collective actions of migrant workers in South ChinaThe China Quarterly198, 287303.Google Scholar
Chan, K. N., & Fan, S. (2021). Friction and bureaucratic control in authoritarian regimes. Regulation & Governance, 15(4), 1406–18.Google Scholar
Chan, K. N., & Lam, W. F. (2018). Bureaucratic control and information processing: an institutional comparison. Governance, 31(3), 575–92.Google Scholar
Chaudhry, K. A. (1993). The myths of the market and the common history of late developers. Politics & Society, 21(3), 245–74.Google Scholar
Chen, J., Jiang, F., & Tong, G. (2017). Economic policy uncertainty in China and stock market expected returns. Accounting & Finance, 57(5), 1265–86.Google Scholar
Chen, L. (2014). Varieties of global capital and the paradox of local upgrading in China. Politics & Society, 42(2), 223–52.Google Scholar
Chen, L., & Hollenbach, F. M. (2022). Capital mobility and taxation: state–business collusion in China. International Studies Quarterly, 66(1), sqab096.Google Scholar
Chen, X. (2012). Social Protest and Contentious Authoritarianism in China. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chng, N. R. (2012). Regulatory mobilization and service delivery at the edge of the regulatory state. Regulation & Governance, 6(3), 344–61.Google Scholar
Coglianese, C., & Kagan, R. A. (2008). Regulation and regulatory processes (SSRN Scholarly Paper ID 1297410). Social Science Research Network.Google Scholar
Coglianese, C., & Lazer, D. (2003). Management-based regulation: prescribing private management to achieve public goals. Law & Society Review, 37(4), 691730.Google Scholar
Cole, D. H., & Grossman, P. Z. (2003). When is command-and-control efficient? Institutions, technology, and the comparative efficiency of alternative regulatory regimes for environmental protection. In Berck, P. and Helfand, G. E., eds., The Theory and Practice of Command and Control in Environmental Policy. Routledge, pp. 115–66.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, N. (1997). Greening small recycling firms: the case of lead smelting units in Calcutta. Environment and Urbanization, 9(2), 289306.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, N. (1998). Tall blunders: present strategies do more harm than goodDown to Earth30, 2225.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, N. (2000). Environmental enforcement and small industries in India: reworking the problem in the poverty context. World Development, 28(5), 945–67.Google Scholar
De Soto, H. (2001). The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. London: Black Swan.Google Scholar
Deng, G., & Kennedy, S. (2010). Big business and industry association lobbying in China: the paradox of contrasting styles. The China Journal, 63, 101–25.Google Scholar
Deng, Y., & O’Brien, K. J. (2013). Relational repression in China: using social ties to demobilize protesters. The China Quarterly, 215, 533–52.Google Scholar
Dickson, B. J. (2003). Red Capitalists in China: The Party, Private Entrepreneurs, and Prospects for Political Change. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dickson, B. J. (2008). Wealth into Power: The Communist Party’s Embrace of China’s Private Sector. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ding, I. (2017). Performative Governance. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
Ding, I. (2020). Performative governance. World Politics, 72(4), 525–56.Google Scholar
Distelhorst, G. (2017). The power of empty promises: quasi-democratic institutions and activism in China. Comparative Political Studies, 50(4), 464–98.Google Scholar
Distelhorst, G., & Hou, Y. (2017). Constituency service under nondemocratic rule: evidence from China. The Journal of Politics, 79(3), 10241040.Google Scholar
Downs, A. (1967). Inside Bureaucracy. Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Dubash, N. K., & Morgan, B. (2012). Understanding the rise of the regulatory state of the South. Regulation & Governance, 6(3), 261–81.Google Scholar
Dubash, N. K., & Morgan, B. (2013). The Rise of the Regulatory State of the South: Infrastructure and Development in Emerging Economies. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Duflo, E., Greenstone, M., Pande, R., & Ryan, N. (2013). Truth-telling by third-party auditors and the response of polluting firms: experimental evidence from India. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 128(4), 14991545.Google Scholar
Dutton, M. (2005). Policing Chinese Politics: A History. Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Eaton, S. (2013). Political economy of the advancing state: the case of China’s airlines reform. The China Journal, 69, 6486.Google Scholar
Eaton, S., & Kostka, G. (2014). Authoritarian environmentalism undermined? Local leaders’ time horizons and environmental policy implementation in China. The China Quarterly, 218, 359–80.Google Scholar
Eaton, S., & Kostka, G. (2017). Central protectionism in China: the “central SOE problem” in environmental governance. The China Quarterly, 231, 685704.Google Scholar
Ebenstein, A., Fan, M., Greenstone, M., He, G., Yin, P., & Zhou, M. (2015). Growth, pollution, and life expectancy: China from 1991–2012. American Economic Review, 105(5), 226–31.Google Scholar
Economy, E. (2014). Environmental governance in China: state control to crisis management. Daedalus, 143(2), 184–97.Google Scholar
Edin, M. (2003). State capacity and local agent control in China: CCP cadre management from a township perspective. The China Quarterly, 173, 3552.Google Scholar
Evans, P. B. (1995). Embedded Autonomy: States and Industrial Transformation. Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, P., & Rauch, J. E. (1999). Bureaucracy and growth: a cross-national analysis of the effects of “Weberian” state structures on economic growth. American Sociological Review, 64(5), 748–65.Google Scholar
Faguet, J.-P. (2012). Decentralization and Popular Democracy: Governance from Below in Bolivia. University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Faguet, J.-P. (2014). Decentralization and governance. World Development, 53, 213.Google Scholar
Fewsmith, J., & Gao, X. (2014). Local governance in China: incentives & tensions. Daedalus, 143(2), 170–83.Google Scholar
Fioletov, V. E., McLinden, C. A., Krotkov, N., Moran, M. D., & Yang, K. (2011). Estimation of SO2 emissions using OMI retrievals. Geophysical Research Letters, 38(21).Google Scholar
Friedman, E. (2014). Insurgency Trap: Labor Politics in Postsocialist China. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Fu, D. (2017). Disguised collective action in China. Comparative Political Studies, 50(4), 499527.Google Scholar
Fukuyama, F. (2013). What is governance? Governance, 26(3), 347–68.Google Scholar
Gallagher, M. E. (2002). “Reform and openness”: why China’s economic reforms have delayed democracyWorld Politics54(3), 338–72.Google Scholar
Gallagher, M. E. (2006). Mobilizing the law in China: “Informed Disenchantment” and the development of legal consciousness. Law & Society Review, 40(4), 783816.Google Scholar
Gallo, C. (1991). Taxes and State Power: Political Instability in Bolivia, 1900–1950. Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Gandhi, J., & Przeworski, A. (2006). Cooperation, cooptation, and rebellion under dictatorships. Economics & Politics, 18(1), 126.Google Scholar
García, J. H., Sterner, T., & Afsah, S. (2007). Public disclosure of industrial pollution: the PROPER approach for Indonesia? Environment and Development Economics12(6), 739–56.Google Scholar
Geddes, B. (1996). Politician’s Dilemma: Building State Capacity in Latin America (1st paperback). University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ghanem, D., & Zhang, J. (2014). ‘Effortless Perfection’: do Chinese cities manipulate air pollution data?Journal of Environmental Economics and Management68(2), 203–25.Google Scholar
Ghertner, D. A. (2015). Rule by Aesthetics: World-Class City Making in Delhi. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gilley, B. (2012). Authoritarian environmentalism and China’s response to climate change. Environmental Politics, 21(2), 287307.Google Scholar
Ginsburg, T., & Moustafa, T. (2008). Rule by Law: The Politics of Courts in Authoritarian Regimes. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Goldstone, J. A. (2006). A historical, not comparative method: breakthroughs and limitations in the theory and methodology of Michael Mann’s analysis of power. In Hall, J. A. & Schroeder, R., eds., An Anatomy of Power: The Social Theory of Michael Mann. Cambridge University Press, pp. 263–82.Google Scholar
Goodwin, J. (2001). No Other Way Out: States and Revolutionary Movements, 1945–1991. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Grabosky, P. (2013). Beyond responsive regulation: the expanding role of non-state actors in the regulatory process. Regulation & Governance, 7(1), 114–23.Google Scholar
Gray, W. B., & Shadbegian, R. J. (2005). When and why do plants comply? Paper mills in the 1980s. Law & Policy, 27(2), 238–61.Google Scholar
Greenstone, M., & Hanna, R. (2014). Environmental regulations, air and water pollution, and infant mortality in India. American Economic Review, 104(10), 3038–72.Google Scholar
Gunningham, N. A., Thornton, D., & Kagan, R. A. (2005). Motivating management: corporate compliance in environmental protection. Law & Policy, 27(2), 289316.Google Scholar
Gunningham, N., & Holley, C. (2016). Next-generation environmental regulation: law, regulation, and governance. Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 12(1), 273–93.Google Scholar
Gunningham, N., Kagan, R. A., & Thornton, D. (2004). Social license and environmental protection: why businesses go beyond compliance. Law & Social Inquiry, 29(2), 307–41.Google Scholar
Haber, S. (2006). Authoritarian government. The Oxford Handbook of Political Economy. Oxford University Press, pp. 693707.Google Scholar
Haddad, M. A. (2015). Increasing environmental performance in a context of low governmental enforcement: evidence from China. The Journal of Environment & Development, 24(1), 325.Google Scholar
Hall, J. A., & Schroeder, R. (2006). An Anatomy of Power: The Social Theory of Michael Mann. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Han, D., Currell, M. J., & Cao, G. (2016). Deep challenges for China’s war on water pollution. Environmental Pollution, 218, 1222–33.Google Scholar
Harrison, A., Hyman, B., Martin, L., & Nataraj, S. (2015). When Do Firms Go Green?: Comparing Price Incentives with Command and Control Regulations in India. National Bureau of Economic Research.Google Scholar
Hasmath, R., Teets, J. C., & Lewis, O. A. (2019). The innovative personality? Policy making and experimentation in an authoritarian bureaucracy. Public Administration and Development, 39(3), 154–62.Google Scholar
Haufler, V. (2013). A Public Role for the Private Sector: Industry Self-regulation in a Global Economy. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.Google Scholar
Hawkins, K. (1984). Environment and Enforcement: Regulation and the Social Definition of Pollution. Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
He, C., & Pan, F. (2013). Decentralization and the environment: industrial air pollution in Chinese cities. In Man, J. Y., ed., China’s Environmental Policy and Urban Development. Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.Google Scholar
He, B., & Warren, M. E. (2011). Authoritarian deliberation: the deliberative turn in Chinese political developmentPerspectives on Politics9(2), 269–89.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S. (2008a). Policy experimentation in China’s economic rise. Studies in Comparative International Development, 43(1), 126.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S. (2008b). From local experiments to national policy: the origins of China’s distinctive policy process. The China Journal, 59, 130.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S. (2009). Maximum tinkering under uncertainty: unorthodox lessons from China. Modern China, 35(4), 450–62.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S., & Melton, O. (2013). The reinvention of development planning in China, 1993–2012. Modern China, 39(6), 580628.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S., & Perry, E. J. (2011a). Embracing uncertainty: guerrilla policy style and adaptive governance in China. In S. Heilmann and E. J. Perry, eds., Mao’s Invisible Hand: The Political Foundations of Adaptive Governance in China. Harvard University Press, pp. 129.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S., & Perry, E. J. (2011b). Mao’s Invisible Hand: The Political Foundations of Adaptive Governance in China. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Heller, P. (2017). Development in the city: growth and inclusion in India, Brazil, and South Africa. In M. Centeno, A., Kohli, D., Yashar, & D. Mistree, eds., States in the Developing World. Cambridge University Press, pp. 309–38.Google Scholar
Helmke, G., & Rosenbluth, F. (2009). Regimes and the rule of law: judicial independence in comparative perspective. Annual Review of Political Science, 12(1), 345–66.Google Scholar
Hendley, K. (2015). Resisting multiple narratives of law in transition countries: Russia and beyond. Law & Social Inquiry, 40(2), 531–52.Google Scholar
Hensengerth, O., & Lu, Y. (2019). Emerging environmental multi-level governance in China? Environmental protests, public participation and local institution-building. Public Policy and Administration, 34(2), 121–43.Google Scholar
Herbst, J. (2000). Economic incentives, natural resources and conflict in Africa. Journal of African Economies, 9(3), 270–94.Google Scholar
Hillman, B. (2010). Factions and spoils: examining political behavior within the local state in China. The China Journal, 64, 118.Google Scholar
Hochstetler, K. (2013). Civil society and the regulatory state of the South. In Dubash, N., Navroz, K., and Morgan, B., eds., The Rise of the Regulatory State of the South: Infrastructure and Development in Emerging Economies. Oxford University Press, pp. 267–75.Google Scholar
Holland, A. (2017). Forbearance as Redistribution: The Politics of Informal Welfare in Latin America. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Holzner, C. (2004). The end of clientelism? Strong and weak networks in a Mexican squatter movement. Mobilization, 9(3), 223–40.Google Scholar
Hou, Y. (2019). The Private Sector in Public Office: Selective Property Rights in China. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hsueh, R. (2016). China’s Regulatory State: A New Strategy for Globalization. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Huang, D. (2013). How do entrepreneurs influence local government policy processes: a state-centered categorization and case analysis (企业家如何影响地方 政策过程:基于国家中心的类型建构和案例分析). Sociological Analysis (社会学研究), 5, 172–96.Google Scholar
Huang, H. (2015). Propaganda as signaling. Comparative Politics, 47(4), 419–44.Google Scholar
Huang, H. (2018). The pathology of hard propaganda. The Journal of Politics, 80(3), 1034–38.Google Scholar
Huang, Y. (2008). Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics: Entrepreneurship and the State. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Huntington, S. P. (1991). Democracy’s third wave. Journal of Democracy, 2(2), 1234.Google Scholar
Hurst, W. (2016). Chinese law and governance: moving beyond responsive authoritarianism and the rule of law. Journal of Chinese Governance, 1(3), 457–69.Google Scholar
Hurst, W. (2018). Ruling Before the Law: The Politics of Legal Regimes in China and Indonesia. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Itahashi, S., Uno, I., Yumimoto, K., Irie, H., Osada, K., Ogata, K., Fukushima, H., Wang, Z., & Ohara, T. (2012). Interannual variation in the fine-mode MODIS aerosol optical depth and its relationship to the changes in sulfur dioxide emissions in China between 2000 and 2010. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(5), 2631–40.Google Scholar
Jahiel, A. R. (1998). The organization of environmental protection in China. The China Quarterly, 156, 757–87.Google Scholar
Jensen, N. (2008). Political risk, democratic institutions, and foreign direct investmentThe Journal of Politics70(4), 1040–52.Google Scholar
Jensen, N. M., Malesky, E., & Weymouth, S. (2014). Unbundling the relationship between authoritarian legislatures and political riskBritish Journal of Political Science44(3), 655–84.Google Scholar
Jia, R. (2017). Pollution for promotion. 21st Century China Center Research Paper (2017-05).Google Scholar
Jiang, J. (2018). Making bureaucracy work: patronage networks, performance incentives, and economic development in China. American Journal of Political Science, 62(4), 982–99.Google Scholar
Johnson, T. (2013). The health factor in anti-waste incinerator campaigns in Beijing and Guangzhou. The China Quarterly, 214, 356–75.Google Scholar
Johnson, T. R. (2016). Regulatory dynamism of environmental mobilization in urban China. Regulation & Governance, 10(1), 1428.Google Scholar
Johnson, T. (2020). Public participation in China’s EIA process and the regulation of environmental disputes. Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 81, 106359.Google Scholar
Johnson, T., Lora-Wainwright, A., & Lu, J. (2018). The quest for environmental justice in China: citizen participation and the rural–urban network against Panguanying’s waste incinerator. Sustainability Science, 13(3), 733–46.Google Scholar
Josephson, P. R. (2004). Resources Under Regimes: Technology, Environment, and the State. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Kagan, R. A., Gunningham, N., & Thornton, D. (2003). Explaining corporate environmental performance: how does regulation matter? Law & Society Review, 37(1), 5190.Google Scholar
Karplus, V. J., Shen, X., & Zhang, D. (2020). Herding cats: firm non-compliance in China’s industrial energy efficiency programThe Energy Journal41(4), 1–26.Google Scholar
Karplus, V. J., & Wu, M. (2019). Crackdowns in hierarchies: evidence from China’s environmental inspections. In MIT CEEPR Working Paper 2019-017.Google Scholar
Karplus, V. J., Zhang, S., & Almond, D. (2018). Quantifying coal power plant responses to tighter SO2 emissions standards in China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 115(27), 7004–9.Google Scholar
Keck, M. E., & Sikkink, K. (2014). Activists beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Kelman, M. (1981). Interpretive construction in the substantive criminal law. Stanford Law Review, 33(4), 591673.Google Scholar
Kennedy, J. J. (2013). Finance and rural governance: centralization and local challenges. The Journal of Peasant Studies, 40(6), 1009–26.Google Scholar
Kennedy, S. (2009). The Business of Lobbying in China. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
King, G., Pan, J., & Roberts, M. E. (2013). How censorship in China allows government criticism but silences collective expression. American Political Science Review, 107(2), 326–43.Google Scholar
Klitgaard, R. E. (1988). Controlling Corruption. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Konisky, D. M. (2009). Inequities in enforcement? Environmental justice and government performance. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 28(1), 102–21.Google Scholar
Konisky, D. M., & Teodoro, M. P. (2016). When governments regulate governments. American Journal of Political Science, 60(3), 559–74.Google Scholar
Kostka, G. (2019). China’s social credit systems and public opinion: explaining high levels of approval. New Media & Society, 21(7), 1565–93.Google Scholar
Kostka, G., & Goron, C. (2021). From targets to inspections: the issue of fairness in China’s environmental policy implementation. Environmental Politics, 30(4), 513–37.Google Scholar
Kostka, G., & Hobbs, W. (2012). Local energy efficiency policy implementation in China: bridging the gap between national priorities and local interests. The China Quarterly, 211, 765–85.Google Scholar
Kostka, G., & Mol, A. P. J. (2013). Implementation and participation in China’s local environmental politics: challenges and innovations. Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning, 15(1), 316.Google Scholar
Kostka, G., & Nahm, J. (2017). Central–local relations: recentralization and environmental governance in China. The China Quarterly, 231, 567–82.Google Scholar
Kuhonta, E. M. (2011). The Institutional Imperative: The Politics of Equitable Development in Southeast Asia. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Kung, J., Cai, Y., & Sun, X. (2009). Rural cadres and governance in China: incentive, institution and accountability. The China Journal, 62, 6177.Google Scholar
Kuran, T. (1991). Now out of never: the element of surprise in the East European revolution of 1989. World Politics, 44(1), 748.Google Scholar
Laari, S., Töyli, J., Solakivi, T., & Ojala, L. (2016). Firm performance and customer-driven green supply chain management. Journal of Cleaner Production, 112, 1960–70.Google Scholar
Landry, P. F. (2008). Decentralized Authoritarianism in China: The Communist Party’s Control of Local Elites in the Post-Mao Era. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lardy, N. R. (2014). Markets over Mao: The Rise of Private Business in China. Peterson Institute for International Economics.Google Scholar
Lee, C. K. (2007). Against the Law: Labor Protests in China’s Rustbelt and Sunbelt. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Lee, C. K. (2017). The Specter of Global China: Politics, Labor, and Foreign Investment in Africa. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lee, M. M., & Zhang, N. (2017). Legibility and the informational foundations of state capacity. The Journal of Politics, 79(1), 118–32.Google Scholar
Leng, N. (2020) NIMBY? Only to Improve State–business Relations. Unpublished Paper.Google Scholar
Leutert, W. (2018). The political mobility of China’s central state-owned enterprise leaders. The China Quarterly, 233, 121.Google Scholar
Leutert, W., & Eaton, S. (2021). Deepening not departure: Xi Jinping’s governance of China’s state-owned economy. The China Quarterly, 248(S1), 200–21.Google Scholar
Levi-Faur, D. (2009). Regulatory capitalism and the reassertion of the public interest. Policy and Society, 27(3), 181–91.Google Scholar
Levitsky, S., & Ziblatt, D. (2018). How Democracies Die: What History Tells Us about Our Future. Viking.Google Scholar
Li, C., Krotkov, N. A., & Leonard, P. (2015). OMI/Aura Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) Total Column L3 1 day Best Pixel in 0.25 degree x 0.25 degree V3. Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center (GES DISC).Google Scholar
Li, G., Shao, S., & Zhang, L. (2019). Green supply chain behavior and business performance: evidence from China. Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 144, 445–55.Google Scholar
Li, H., & Zhou, L.-A. (2005). Political turnover and economic performance: the incentive role of personnel control in China. Journal of Public Economics, 89(9), 1743–62.Google Scholar
Li, W., Liu, J., & Li, D. (2012). Getting their voices heard: three cases of public participation in environmental protection in ChinaJournal of Environmental Management98, 6572.Google Scholar
Li, X., & Chan, C. G.-W. (2016). Who pollutes? Ownership type and environmental performance of Chinese firms. Journal of Contemporary China, 25(98), 248–63.Google Scholar
Li, Y. (2019). Playing by the Informal Rules: Why the Chinese Regime Remains Stable Despite Rising Protests. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lieberman, E. S. (2003). Race and Regionalism in the Politics of Taxation in Brazil and South Africa. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lieberthal, K., & Lampton, D. M. (1992). Bureaucracy, Politics, and Decision Making in Post-Mao China. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Lieberthal, K., & Oksenberg, M. (2020). Policy Making in China. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Liebman, B. L. (2007). China’s courts: restricted reform. The China Quarterly, 191, 620–38.Google Scholar
Liebman, B. L. (2014). Legal reform: China’s law-stability paradox. Daedalus, 143(2), 96109.Google Scholar
Lindblom, C. E. (1959). The science of muddling throughPublic Administration Review, 19(2), 7988.Google Scholar
Lindblom, C. E. (1977). Politics and Markets: The World’s Political-Economic Systems. Basic Books.Google Scholar
Lipsky, M. (1980). Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services. Russell Sage Foundation.Google Scholar
Liu, N. N., Lo, C. W.-H., Zhan, X., & Wang, W. (2015). Campaign-style enforcement and regulatory compliance. Public Administration Review, 75(1), 8595.Google Scholar
Liu, N., Van Rooij, B., & Lo, C. W.-H. (2018). Beyond deterrent enforcement styles: behavioural intuitions of Chinese environmental law enforcement agents in a context of challenging inspections. Public Administration, 96(3), 497512.Google Scholar
Looney, K. E. (2020). Mobilizing for Development: The Modernization of Rural East Asia. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Looney, K., & Rithmire, M. (2017). China gambles on modernizing through urbanization. Current History, 116(791), 203–9.Google Scholar
Lora-Wainwright, A. (2021). Resigned Activism: Living with Pollution in Rural China. MIT Press.Google Scholar
Lora-Wainwright, A., Zhang, Y., Wu, Y., & Van Rooij, B. (2012). Learning to live with pollution: the making of environmental subjects in a Chinese industrialized villageThe China Journal, 68, 106–24.Google Scholar
Lorentzen, P. (2014). China’s strategic censorship. American Journal of Political Science, 58(2), 402–14.Google Scholar
Lorentzen, P. L., & Lu, X. (2018). Personal ties, meritocracy, and China’s anti-corruption campaign (SSRN Scholarly Paper ID 2835841). Social Science Research Network.Google Scholar
Lorentzen, P., Landry, P., & Yasuda, J. (2014). Undermining authoritarian innovation: the power of China’s industrial giants. The Journal of Politics, 76(1), 182–94.Google Scholar
, X., & Landry, P. F. (2014). Show me the money: interjurisdiction political competition and fiscal extraction in China. American Political Science Review, 108(3), 706–22.Google Scholar
Lust-Okar, E. (2005). Structuring Conflict in the Arab World: Incumbents, Opponents, and Institutions. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Magaloni, B. (2006). Voting for Autocracy: Hegemonic Party Survival and its Demise in Mexico. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Magaloni, B. (2008). Credible power-sharing and the longevity of authoritarian rule. Comparative Political Studies, 41(4–5), 715–41.Google Scholar
Manion, M. (2004). Corruption by Design: Building Clean Government in Mainland China and Hong Kong. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Manion, M. (2016). Taking China’s anticorruption campaign seriously. Economic and Political Studies, 4(1), 318.Google Scholar
Mann, M. (1984). The autonomous power of the state: its origins, mechanisms and results. European Journal of Sociology / Archives Européennes de Sociologie, 25(2), 185213.Google Scholar
Mann, M. (2008). Infrastructural power revisited. Studies in Comparative International Development, 43(3), 355–65.Google Scholar
Mascini, P. (2013). Why was the enforcement pyramid so influential? And what price was paid? Regulation & Governance, 7(1), 4860.Google Scholar
Mattingly, D. (2020). The Art of Political Control in China. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
McAllister, L. K. (2008). Making Law Matter: Environmental Protection and Legal Institutions in Brazil. Stanford Law Books.Google Scholar
McCubbins, M. D., & Schwartz, T. (1984). Congressional oversight overlooked: police patrols versus fire alarms. American Journal of Political Science, 28(1), 165–79.Google Scholar
Mei, C., & Pearson, M. M. (2014). Killing a chicken to scare the monkeys? Deterrence failure and local defiance in China. The China Journal, 72, 7597.Google Scholar
Mei, C., & Pearson, M. M. (2017). The dilemma of “managing for results” in China: won’t let go. Public Administration and Development, 37(3), 203–16.Google Scholar
Meng, T., Pan, J., & Yang, P. (2017). Conditional receptivity to citizen participation: evidence from a survey experiment in China. Comparative Political Studies, 50(4), 399433.Google Scholar
Mertha, A. C. (2005). China’s “soft” centralization: shifting tiao/kuai authority relations. The China Quarterly, 184, 791810.Google Scholar
Mertha, A. C. (2009). “Fragmented authoritarianism 2.0”: political pluralization in the Chinese policy process. The China Quarterly, 200, 9951012.Google Scholar
Mertha, A. C. (2014). China’s Water Warriors: Citizen Action and Policy Change. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Mertha, A. C. (2017). “Stressing out”: cadre calibration and affective proximity to the CCP in reform-era China. The China Quarterly, 229, 6485.Google Scholar
Michelson, E. (2007). Lawyers, political embeddedness, and institutional continuity in China’s transition from socialism. American Journal of Sociology, 113(2), 352414.Google Scholar
Michelson, E. (2008). Justice from above or below? Popular strategies for resolving grievances in rural China. The China Quarterly, 193, 4364.Google Scholar
Migdal, J. S. (2001). State in Society: Studying How States and Societies Transform and Constitute One Another. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Migdal, J. S., Kohli, A., & Shue, V. (1994). Introduction: developing a state-in-society perspective. In Migdal, J. S., Kohli, A., & Shue, V., eds., State Power and Social Forces: Domination and Transformation in the Third World. Cambridge University Press, pp. 14.Google Scholar
Minzner, C. F. (2011). China’s turn against law. The American Journal of Comparative Law, 59(4), 935–84.Google Scholar
Minzner, C. F. (2015). Legal reform in the Xi Jinping era. Asia Policy, 20, 49.Google Scholar
Minzner, C. F. (2018). End of an Era: How China’s Authoritarian Revival is Undermining its Rise. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Moustafa, T. (2007). The Struggle for Constitutional Power: Law, Politics, and Economic Development in Egypt. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Moustafa, T. (2014). Law and courts in authoritarian regimes. Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 10(1), 281–99.Google Scholar
Nahm, J. (2017). Renewable futures and industrial legacies: wind and solar sectors in China, Germany, and the United States. Business and Politics, 19(1), 68106.Google Scholar
Nahm, J., & Steinfeld, E. S. (2014). Scale-up nation: China’s specialization in innovative manufacturing. World Development, 54, 288300.Google Scholar
Nathan, A. J. (2003). Authoritarian resilience. Journal of Democracy, 14(1), 617.Google Scholar
Naughton, B. (1995). Growing Out of the Plan: Chinese Economic Reform, 1978–1993. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Naughton, B. (2014). China’s economy: complacency, crisis & the challenge of reform. Daedalus, 143(2), 1425.Google Scholar
Naughton, B. (2016). Inside and outside: the modernized hierarchy that runs China. Journal of Comparative Economics, 44(2), 404–15.Google Scholar
Naughton, B. (2017). Is China socialist? Journal of Economic Perspectives, 31(1), 324.Google Scholar
Naughton, B., & Tsai, K. S. (2015). State Capitalism, Institutional Adaptation, and the Chinese Miracle. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Neaera Abers, R., & Keck, M. E. (2009). Mobilizing the state: the erratic partner in Brazil’s participatory water policy. Politics & Society, 37(2), 289314.Google Scholar
Nickolay, A. Krotkov, Li, Can, and Leonard, Peter (2015), OMI/Aura Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) Total Column L3 1 day Best Pixel in 0.25 degree x 0.25 degree V3. Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center (GES DISC).Google Scholar
Nielsen, C. P., & Ho, M. S. (2013). Clearer Skies over China: Reconciling Air Quality, Climate, and Economic Goals. MIT Press.Google Scholar
Niskanen, W. A. (1971). Bureaucracy and Representative Government. Aldine, Atherton.Google Scholar
North, D. C., & Weingast, B. R. (1989). Constitutions and commitment: the evolution of institutions governing public choice in seventeenth-century England. The Journal of Economic History, 49(4), 803–32.Google Scholar
O’Brien, K. J., & Deng, Y. (2017). Preventing protest one person at a time: psychological coercion and relational repression in China. China Review, 17(2), 179201.Google Scholar
O’Brien, K. J., & Li, L. (1999). Selective policy implementation in rural ChinaComparative Politics, 31(2), 167–86.Google Scholar
O’Brien, K. J., & Li, L. (2006). Rightful Resistance in Rural China. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
O’Donnell, G. A., Schmitter, P. C., & Whitehead, L. (1986). Transitions from Authoritarian Rule: Latin America. Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
O’Rourke, D. (2004). Community-driven Regulation: Balancing Development and the Environment in Vietnam. MIT Press.Google Scholar
Oi, J. C. (1999). Rural China Takes Off: Institutional Foundations of Economic Reform. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Olken, B. A. (2007). Monitoring corruption: evidence from a field experiment in Indonesia. The Journal of Political Economy, 115(2), 200–49.Google Scholar
Olson, M. (1993). Dictatorship, democracy, and development. American Political Science Review, 87(3), 567–76.Google Scholar
Ong, L. (2006). The political economy of township government debt, township enterprises and rural financial institutions in China. The China Quarterly, 186, 377400.Google Scholar
Ong, L. H. (2012a). Prosper or Perish: Credit and Fiscal Systems in Rural China. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Ong, L. H. (2012b). Between developmental and clientelist states: local state–business relationships in China. Comparative Politics, 44(2), 191209.Google Scholar
Ong, L. H. (2018). Thugs and outsourcing of state repression in China. The China Journal, 80, 94110.Google Scholar
Ostrom, E. (1990). Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Paoli, G., & Wiles, A. (2015). Key analytical capabilities of a best-in-class regulator. Penn Program on Regulation Research Paper.Google Scholar
Pargal, S., & Wheeler, D. (1996). Informal regulation of industrial pollution in developing countries: evidence from Indonesia. The Journal of Political Economy, 104(6), 1314–27.Google Scholar
Pearson, M. (2011). Variety within and without: the political economy of Chinese regulation. In Kennedy, S., ed., Beyond the Middle Kingdom. Stanford University Press, pp. 25–43.Google Scholar
Pearson, M. M. (2015). State-owned business and party-state regulation in China’s modern political economy. In Naughton, B. & Tsai, K. S., eds., State Capitalism, Institutional Adaptation, and the Chinese Miracle. Cambridge University Press, pp. 2745.Google Scholar
Peck, M. J., Levin, R. C., & Goto, A. (1987). Picking losers: public policy toward declining industries in Japan. Journal of Japanese Studies, 13(1), 79123.Google Scholar
Pei, M. (2009). China’s Trapped Transition: The Limits of Developmental Autocracy. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Pei, M. (2017). China’s Crony Capitalism: The Dynamics of Regime Decay. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Perry, E. J. (2007). Studying Chinese politics: farewell to revolution? The China Journal, 57(57), 122.Google Scholar
Pflug, K. (2018). Impact of tightened environmental regulation on China’s chemical industry. Journal of Business Chemistry, 15(3), 96106.Google Scholar
Pils, E. (2014). China’s Human Rights Lawyers: Advocacy and Resistance. Routledge.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1957). The Great Transformation (Beacon paperbacks; 45). Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Post, A. E. (2014). Foreign and Domestic Investment in Argentina: The Politics of Privatized Infrastructure. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ran, R. and Han, D. (2014). Ruhe yong zhidu baohu shengtai huanjing? Huanjing zhili zhong de zhongyang – difang guanxi (How to use institutions to protect the environment? Center-local relations in environmental regulation). Zhongguo Gaige Xili Baogao (China Reform Report Series), 26.Google Scholar
Repnikova, M. (2017). Media Politics in China: Improvising Power under Authoritarianism. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Revesz, R. L. (1992). Rehabilitating interstate competition: rethinking the “race-to-the-bottom” rationale for federal environmental regulation. New York University Law Review, 67(6), 1210–54.Google Scholar
Rithmire, M. E. (2013). Land politics and local state capacities: the political economy of urban change in China. The China Quarterly, 216, 872–95.Google Scholar
Rithmire, M. E. (2017). Land institutions and Chinese political economy: institutional complementarities and macroeconomic management. Politics & Society, 45(1), 123–53.Google Scholar
Roberts, M. E. (2018). Censored: Distraction and Diversion Inside China’s Great Firewall. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Rodden, J. (2004). Comparative federalism and decentralization: on meaning and measurement. Comparative Politics, 36(4), 481500.Google Scholar
Rohde, R. A., & Muller, R. A. (2015). Air pollution in China: mapping of concentrations and sources. PLOS ONE, 10(8), e0135749.Google Scholar
Rooij, B. van, Zhu, Q., Na, L., & Qiliang, W. (2017). Centralizing trends and pollution law enforcement in China. The China Quarterly, 231, 583606.Google Scholar
Root, H. L. (1989). Tying the king’s hands: credible commitments and royal fiscal policy during the old regime. Rationality and Society, 1(2), 240–58.Google Scholar
Rosberg, J. (1995). The Rise of an Independent Judiciary in Egypt. Ph.D. dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.Google Scholar
Rosencranz, A., & Jackson, M. (2003). The Delhi pollution case: the Supreme Court of India and the limits of judicial power. Columbia Journal of Environmental Law, 28, 223–54.Google Scholar
Rothstein, B. (2015). The Chinese paradox of high growth and low quality of government: the cadre organization meets Max Weber. Governance, 28(4), 533–48.Google Scholar
Rothstein, H., Borraz, O., & Huber, M. (2013). Risk and the limits of governance: exploring varied patterns of risk-based governance across Europe. Regulation & Governance, 7(2), 215–35.Google Scholar
Saffon, M. P., & Bertomeu, J. G. (2019). What/whose property rights? The Selective Enforcement of Land Rights under Mexican Liberalism in Mexico. In Brinks, D. M., Levitsky, S., & Murillo, M. V., eds., Understanding Institutional Weakness: Lessons from Latin America. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sappington, D. E., & Stiglitz, J. E. (1987). Privatization, information and incentives. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 6(4), 567–85.Google Scholar
Savedoff, W. D., & Spiller, P. T. (1999). Spilled Water: Institutional Commitment in the Provision of Water Services. Inter-American Development Bank.Google Scholar
Schlæger, J., & Zhou, J. (2019). Digital environmental monitoring in urban China. In Delman, J., Ren, Y., Luova, O., Burell, M., & Almén, O., eds., Greening China’s Urban Governance: Tackling Environmental and Sustainability Challenges. Springer, pp. 131–49.Google Scholar
Scholz, J. T. (1984a). Voluntary compliance and regulatory enforcement. Law & Policy, 6(4), 385404.Google Scholar
Scholz, J. T. (1984b). Cooperation, deterrence, and the ecology of regulatory enforcement. Law and Society Review, 179–224.Google Scholar
Scott, J. C. (1998). Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes To Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Seligsohn, D. J. (2018). Corporate Concentration and Air Pollution Governance in China (Doctoral dissertation, UC San Diego)Google Scholar
Seligsohn, D., Liu, M., & Zhang, B. (2018). The sound of one hand clapping: transparency without accountability. Environmental Politics, 27(5), 804–29.Google Scholar
Shapiro, J. (2001). Mao’s War against Nature: Politics and the Environment in Revolutionary China. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shearman, D., & Smith, J. (2007). The Climate Change Challenge and the Failure of Democracy. Praeger.Google Scholar
Shen, W., & Jiang, D. (2021). Making authoritarian environmentalism accountable? Understanding China’s new reforms on environmental governance. The Journal of Environment & Development, 30(1), 4167.Google Scholar
Shen, Y., & Ahlers, A. L. (2019). Blue sky fabrication in China: science–policy integration in air pollution regulation campaigns for mega-events. Environmental Science & Policy, 94, 135–42.Google Scholar
Shirk, S. L. (1993). The Political Logic of Economic Reform in China. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Short, J. L., & Toffel, M. W. (2010). Making self-regulation more than merely symbolic: the critical role of the legal environment. Administrative Science Quarterly, 55(3), 361–96.Google Scholar
Shue, V. (1988). The Reach of the State: Sketches of the Chinese Body Politic. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Silbey, S. (1984). The consequences of responsive regulation. In Hawkins, K. & Thomas, J. M., eds., Enforcing Regulation Law in Social Context Series. Kluwer-Nijhoff, pp. 145–70.Google Scholar
Skocpol, T. (1985). Bringing the state back in: strategies of analysis in current research. In Evans, P. B., Rueschemeyer, D., & Skocpol, T., eds., Bringing the State Back In. Cambridge University Press, pp. 338.Google Scholar
Slater, D. (2008). Can leviathan be democratic? Competitive elections, robust mass politics, and state infrastructural power. Studies in Comparative International Development, 43(3), 252–72.Google Scholar
Slater, D. (2010). Ordering Power: Contentious Politics and Authoritarian Leviathans in Southeast Asia. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Snow, D., Cress, D., Downey, L., & Jones, A. (2006). Disrupting the “quotidian”: reconceptualizing the relationship between breakdown and the emergence of collective action. Mobilization: An International Quarterly, 3(1), 122.Google Scholar
Soifer, H. (2008). State infrastructural power: approaches to conceptualization and measurement. Studies in Comparative International Development, 43(3), 231–51.Google Scholar
Solinger, D. J., & Jiang, T. (2016). When Chinese central orders and promotion criteria conflict: implementation decisions on the destitute in poor versus prosperous cities. Modern China, 42(6), 571606.Google Scholar
Staats, J. L., & Biglaiser, G. (2012). Foreign direct investment in Latin America: the importance of judicial strength and rule of law. International Studies Quarterly, 56(1), 193202.Google Scholar
Stern, R. E. (2010). On the frontlines: making decisions in Chinese civil environmental lawsuits. Law & Policy, 32(1), 79103.Google Scholar
Stern, R. E. (2013). Environmental Litigation in China: A Study in Political Ambivalence. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stern, R. E. (2017). Activist lawyers in post-Tiananmen China. Law & Social Inquiry, 42(1), 234–51.Google Scholar
Stern, R. E., & Hassid, J. (2012). Amplifying silence: uncertainty and control parables in contemporary China. Comparative Political Studies, 45(10), 1230–54.Google Scholar
Stern, R. E., & Liu, L. J. (2020). The good lawyer: state-led professional socialization in contemporary China. Law & Social Inquiry, 45(1), 226–48.Google Scholar
Stern, R. E., & O’Brien, K. J. (2012). Politics at the boundary: mixed signals and the Chinese state. Modern China, 38(2), 174–98.Google Scholar
Stockmann, D. (2013). Media Commercialization and Authoritarian Rule in China. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Strauss, J. (2006). Morality, coercion and state building by campaign in the early PRC: regime consolidation and after, 1949–1956. The China Quarterly, 188, 891912.Google Scholar
Strauss, J. C. (2009). Forestry reform and the transformation of state capacity in fin-de-siècle China. The Journal of Asian Studies, 68(4), 1163–88.Google Scholar
Su, Y., & He, X. (2010). Street as courtroom: state accommodation of labor protest in South China. Law & Society Review, 44(1), 157–84.Google Scholar
Tan, Y. (2014). Transparency without democracy: the unexpected effects of China’s environmental disclosure policy. Governance: An International Journal of Policy and Administration, 27(1), 3762.Google Scholar
Tanner, M. S. (1999). The Politics of Lawmaking in Post-Mao China: Institutions, Processes, and Democratic Prospects. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Tanner, M. S. (2000). State coercion and the balance of awe: the 1983–1986 “Stern Blows” anti-crime campaign. The China Journal, 44, 93125.Google Scholar
Tarrow, S. G. (2011). Power in Movement: Social Movements and Contentious Politics. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Teets, J. C. (2014). Civil Society under Authoritarianism: The China Model. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Teets, J. C. (2018). The power of policy networks in authoritarian regimes: changing environmental policy in China. Governance, 31(1), 125–41.Google Scholar
Thompson, M. R. (2021). Pushback after backsliding? Unconstrained executive aggrandizement in the Philippines versus contested military-monarchical rule in Thailand. Democratization, 28(1), 124–41.Google Scholar
Thornton, D., Kagan, R. A., & Gunningham, N. (2008). Compliance costs, regulation, and environmental performance: controlling truck emissions in the US. Regulation & Governance, 2(3), 275–92.Google Scholar
Thornton, D., Kagan, R. A., & Gunningham, N. (2009). When social norms and pressures are not enough: environmental performance in the trucking industry. Law & Society Review, 43(2), 405–36.Google Scholar
Thornton, P. M. (2009). Crisis and governance: SARS and the resilience of the Chinese body politic. The China Journal, 61, 2348.Google Scholar
Tian, G., & Tsai, W.-H. (2020). The policy implementation strategies of county cadres: political instrument and flexible local governance. China Information.Google Scholar
Tilly, C. (1992). Coercion, Capital, and European States, A.D. 990–1992. Blackwell.Google Scholar
Tilt, B. (2007). The political ecology of pollution enforcement in China: a case from Sichuan’s rural industrial sector. The China Quarterly, 192, 915–32.Google Scholar
Tilton, M. (1996). Restrained trade: Cartels in Japan’s basic materials industries. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Truex, R. (2014). The returns to office in a “rubber stamp” parliament. American Political Science Review, 108(2), 235–51.Google Scholar
Truex, R. (2017). Consultative authoritarianism and its limits. Comparative Political Studies, 50(3), 329–61.Google Scholar
Tsai, K. S. (2002). Back-Alley Banking: Private Entrepreneurs in China. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Tsai, K. S. (2011). Capitalism without Democracy: The Private Sector in Contemporary China. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Tsai, K. S. (2015). The political economy of state capitalism and shadow banking in China (SSRN Scholarly Paper ID 2607793). Social Science Research Network.Google Scholar
Tsui, K. (2005). Local tax system, intergovernmental transfers and China’s local fiscal disparities. Journal of Comparative Economics, 33(1), 173196.Google Scholar
Tsui, K., & Wang, Y. (2004). Between separate stoves and a single menu: fiscal decentralization in China. The China Quarterly, 177, 7190.Google Scholar
Tudor, M. J. (2013). The Promise of Power: The Origins of Democracy in India and Autocracy in Pakistan. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
van de Walle, N. (1989). Privatization in developing countries: a review of the issues. World Development, 17(5), 601–15.Google Scholar
van der Kamp, D. (2021). Can police patrols prevent pollution? The limits of authoritarian environmental governance in China. Comparative Politics, 53(3), 403–33.Google Scholar
van der Kamp, D., Lorentzen, P., & Mattingly, D. (2017). Racing to the bottom or to the top? Decentralization, revenue pressures, and governance reform in China. World Development, 95, 164–76.Google Scholar
van Rooij, B. (2002). Implementing Chinese environmental law through enforcement: the Shiwu Xiao and Shuang Dabiao campaigns. In Chen, J., Otto, J. M., & Li, Y., eds., Implementation of Law in the People’s Republic of China. Kluwer Law International, pp. 149–78.Google Scholar
van Rooij, B. (2006). Implementation of Chinese environmental law: regular enforcement and political campaigns. Development and Change, 37(1), 5774.Google Scholar
van Rooij, B. (2009). The politics of law in China: enforcement campaigns in the post-Mao PRC (SSRN Scholarly Paper ID 1368181). Social Science Research Network.Google Scholar
van Rooij, B. (2010). The people vs. pollution: understanding citizen action against pollution in China. Journal of Contemporary China, 19(63), 5577.Google Scholar
van Rooij, B., Stern, R. E., & Fürst, K. (2016). The authoritarian logic of regulatory pluralism: understanding China’s new environmental actors. Regulation & Governance, 10(1), 313.Google Scholar
Van Rooij, B., Zhu, Q., Na, L., & Qiliang, W. (2017). Centralizing trends and pollution law enforcement in ChinaThe China Quarterly231, 583606.Google Scholar
Viscusi, W. K., Vernon, J. M., & Harrington, J. E. (2000). Economics of Regulation and Antitrust (3rd ed.). MIT Press.Google Scholar
Vogel, D. (2005). The Market for Virtue: The Potential and Limits of Corporate Social Responsibility. Brookings Institution Press.Google Scholar
Vogel, S. K. (1996). Freer Markets, More Rules: Regulatory Reform in Advanced Industrial Countries. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Vortherms, S. A. (2019). China’s missing children: political barriers to citizenship through the household registration system. The China Quarterly, 238, 309–30.Google Scholar
Walker, K. L. M. (2008). From covert to overt: everyday peasant politics in China and the implications for transnational agrarian movements. Journal of Agrarian Change, 8(2–3), 462–88.Google Scholar
Wallace, J. L. (2016). Juking the stats? Authoritarian information problems in China. British Journal of Political Science, 46(1), 1129.Google Scholar
Wang, A. L. (2013). The search for sustainable legitimacy: environmental law and bureaucracy in China. Harvard Environmental Law Review, 37, 365440.Google Scholar
Wang, A. L. (2018). Explaining environmental information disclosure in China. Ecology Law Quarterly, 44(4), 865924.Google Scholar
Wang, E. H. (2021). Frightened Mandarins: the adverse effects of fighting corruption on local bureaucracy. Comparative Political Studies.Google Scholar
Wang, H., & Jin, Y. (2007). Industrial ownership and environmental performance: evidence from China. Environmental and Resource Economics, 36(3), 255–73.Google Scholar
Wang, S., Paul, M. J., & Dredze, M. (2015). Social media as a sensor of air quality and public response in China. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 17(3), e22.Google Scholar
Wang, X. (1997). Mutual empowerment of state and peasantry: grassroots democracy in rural China. World Development, 25(9), 1431–42.Google Scholar
Wang, X. (2016). Requests for environmental information disclosure in China: an understanding from legal mobilization and citizen activism. Journal of Contemporary China, 25(98), 233–47.Google Scholar
Wang, X., & Herd, R. (2013). The System of Revenue Sharing and Fiscal Transfers in China. OECD.Google Scholar
Wang, Y. (2015). Tying the Autocrat’s Hands. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wang, Y. (2016). Beyond local protectionism: China’s state–business relations in the last two decades. The China Quarterly, 226, 319341.Google Scholar
Wang, Y., & Minzner, C. (2015). The rise of the Chinese security state. The China Quarterly, 222, 339–59.Google Scholar
Ward, H., Cao, X., & Mukherjee, B. (2014). State capacity and the environmental investment gap in authoritarian states. Comparative Political Studies, 47(3), 309–43.Google Scholar
Weber, M., Roth, G., Wittich, C., & Fischoff, E. (1978). Economy and society: An outline of interpretive sociology. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wedeman, A. (2005). Anticorruption campaigns and the intensification of corruption in China. Journal of Contemporary China, 14(42), 93116.Google Scholar
Weinberg, J. (2017). Bureaucracy as violence. Michigan Law Review, 115(6), 10971116.Google Scholar
Weingast, B. R. (1984). The congressional-bureaucratic system: a principal agent perspective (with applications to the SEC)Public choice44(1), 147–91.Google Scholar
Weingast, B. R. (2014). Second generation fiscal federalism: political aspects of decentralization and economic development. World Development, 53, 1425.Google Scholar
Wengle, S. A. (2015). Post-Soviet Power: State-led Development and Russia’s Marketization. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wilson, J. (1980). The Politics of regulation. Basic Books.Google Scholar
Wong, C., & Karplus, V. J. (2017). China’s war on air pollution: can existing governance structures support new ambitions? The China Quarterly, 231, 662–84.Google Scholar
Woo-Cumings, M. (1999). The Developmental State. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Woodworth, M. D., & Wallace, J. L. (2017). Seeing ghosts: parsing China’s “ghost city” controversy. Urban Geography, 38(8), 1270–81.Google Scholar
Wright, T. (2010). Accepting Authoritarianism: State–Society Relations in China’s Reform Era. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Wu, A. M., & Wang, W. (2013). Determinants of expenditure decentralization: evidence from China. World Development, 46, 176–84.Google Scholar
Xu, C. (2011). The fundamental institutions of China’s reforms and development. Journal of Economic Literature, 49(4), 10761151.Google Scholar
Xu, X., Kostka, G., & Cao, X. (2021). Information control and public support for social credit systems in China. The Journal of Politics.Google Scholar
Yang, L. C. (2015) Analysis of the Impact of Firm Closures on the Livelihood of the Local Informal Workforce (企业关停对当地临时就业人员的生计影响研究), FORHEAD Report, Beijing.Google Scholar
Yang, D. L. (2017). China’s illiberal regulatory state in comparative perspective. Chinese Political Science Review, 2(1), 114–33.Google Scholar
Yang, Y. (2021). The politics of inclusion and exclusion: Chinese dual-pension regimes in the era of labor migration and labor informalization. Politics & Society, 49(2), 147–80.Google Scholar
Yang, Y., & Gallagher, M. (2017). Moving in and moving up? Labor conditions and China’s changing development model. Public Administration and Development, 37(3), 160–75.Google Scholar
Yashar, D. J. (2018). Homicidal Ecologies: Illicit Economies and Complicit States in Latin America. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Yasuda, J. K. (2016). Regulatory governance. In Ansell, C. & Torfing, J., eds., Handbook on Theories of Governance. Edward Elgar, pp. 428–41.Google Scholar
Yasuda, J. K. (2017). On Feeding the Masses. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Yasuda, J. K. (2020). The other side of uncertainty: the perils of policy experimentation in post-reform China. Unpublished paper.Google Scholar
Zhan, X., Lo, C. W.-H., & Tang, S.-Y. (2014). Contextual changes and environmental policy implementation: a longitudinal study of street-level bureaucrats in Guangzhou, China. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 24(4), 1005–35.Google Scholar
Zhang, L.-Y. (1999). Chinese central–provincial fiscal relationships, budgetary decline and the impact of the 1994 fiscal reform: an evaluation. The China Quarterly, 157, 115–41.Google Scholar
Zhang, X. (2017). Implementation of pollution control targets in China: has a centralized enforcement approach worked? The China Quarterly, 231, 749–74.Google Scholar
Zhi, Q., & Pearson, M. M. (2017). China’s hybrid adaptive bureaucracy: the case of the 863 program for science and technology. Governance, 30(3), 407–24.Google Scholar
Zhong, Y., & Hwang, W. (2016). Pollution, institutions and street protests in urban China. Journal of Contemporary China, 25(98), 216–32.Google Scholar
Zhou, X. (2010). The institutional logic of collusion among local governments in China. Modern China, 36(1), 4778.Google Scholar
Zhou, X. (2017). The institutional logic of governance in China: an organizational approach.  SDX-Joint Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Zhou, X., Lian, H., Ortolano, L., & Ye, Y. (2013). A behavioral model of “muddling through” in the Chinese bureaucracy: the case of environmental protection. The China Journal, 70(1), 120–47.Google Scholar
Zhu, J., Huang, H., & Zhang, D. (2019). “Big tigers, big data”: learning social reactions to China’s anticorruption campaign through online feedback. Public Administration Review, 79(4), 500–13.Google Scholar
Zhu, J., & Zhang, D. (2017). Does corruption hinder private businesses? Leadership stability and predictable corruption in China. Governance, 30(3), 343–63.Google Scholar
Zhu, J., Zhang, Q., & Liu, Z. (2017). Eating, drinking, and power signaling in institutionalized authoritarianism: China’s anti-waste campaign since 2012. Journal of Contemporary China, 26(105), 337–52.Google Scholar
Zhu, X., Qiu, T., & Liu, D. (2022). Resisting public monitoring in authoritarian regimes: evidence from local environmental litigation in China. Governance.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×