Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Angle, Stephen C.
2005.
Must we choose our leaders? human rights and political participation in China.
Journal of Global Ethics,
Vol. 1,
Issue. 2,
p.
177.
Angle, Stephen C.
2005.
Decent Democratic Centralism.
Political Theory,
Vol. 33,
Issue. 4,
p.
518.
Guan, Mei
and
Green, Donald P.
2006.
Noncoercive Mobilization in State-Controlled Elections.
Comparative Political Studies,
Vol. 39,
Issue. 10,
p.
1175.
Law, Wing-Wah
2007.
Legislation and educational change: the struggle for social justice and quality in China's compulsory schooling.
Education and the Law,
Vol. 19,
Issue. 3-4,
p.
177.
Law, Wing-Wah
and
Pan, Su-Yan
2009.
Game theory and educational policy: Private education legislation in China.
International Journal of Educational Development,
Vol. 29,
Issue. 3,
p.
227.
Shigong, Jiang
2010.
Written and Unwritten Constitutions: A New Approach to the Study of Constitutional Government in China.
Modern China,
Vol. 36,
Issue. 1,
p.
12.
Clarke, Donald C.
2010.
New Approaches to the Study of Political Order in China.
Modern China,
Vol. 36,
Issue. 1,
p.
87.
Xie, Lei
and
Van Der Heijden, Hein-Anton
2010.
Environmental Movements and Political Opportunities: The Case of China.
Social Movement Studies,
Vol. 9,
Issue. 1,
p.
51.
Ma, Liang
and
Wu, Jiannan
2011.
What Drives Fiscal Transparency? Evidence from Provincial Governments in China.
SSRN Electronic Journal,
Nie, Huihua
Jiang, Minjie
and
Wang, Xianghong
2013.
The impact of political cycle: Evidence from coalmine accidents in China.
Journal of Comparative Economics,
Vol. 41,
Issue. 4,
p.
995.
Manion, Melanie
2014.
Authoritarian Parochialism: Local Congressional Representation in China.
The China Quarterly,
Vol. 218,
Issue. ,
p.
311.
Xu, Jianhua
2014.
Authoritarian policing with Chinese characteristics: A case study of motorcycle bans in the Pearl River Delta.
Crime, Law and Social Change,
Vol. 61,
Issue. 4,
p.
439.
Ma, Jun
and
Lin, Muhua
2015.
“The Power of the Purse” of Local People's Congresses in China: Controllable Contestation under Bureaucratic Negotiation.
The China Quarterly,
Vol. 223,
Issue. ,
p.
680.
Su, Zheng
and
Meng, Tianguang
2016.
Selective responsiveness: Online public demands and government responsiveness in authoritarian China.
Social Science Research,
Vol. 59,
Issue. ,
p.
52.
Huang, Dongya
and
He, Quanling
2018.
Striking a Balance between Contradictory Roles: The Overlapping Role Perceptions of the Deputies in China’s Local People’s Congresses.
Modern China,
Vol. 44,
Issue. 1,
p.
103.
Tung, Hans H.
2019.
Economic Growth and Endogenous Authoritarian Institutions in Post-Reform China.
p.
137.
Niu, Meili
and
Lin, Muhua
2020.
When the power of the purse meets the power of technology: a case study of Guangzhou People’s Congress in China.
Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration,
Vol. 42,
Issue. 4,
p.
274.
Shi, Qingling
Shi, Chenchen
and
Guo, Feng
2020.
Political Blue Sky: Evidence from the Local Annual “Two Sessions” in China.
Resource and Energy Economics,
Vol. 61,
Issue. ,
p.
101165.
Ye, Shihua
and
Gong, Xiaochen
2021.
Nonprofits’ Receipt of Government Revenue in China: Institutionalization, Accountability and Political Embeddedness.
Chinese Public Administration Review,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 1,
p.
1.
Yang, Xuedong
and
Yan, Jian
2021.
Governance edging out representation? Explaining the imbalanced functions of China’s people’s congress system.
Journal of Chinese Governance,
Vol. 6,
Issue. 1,
p.
110.