Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T19:17:18.720Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Shall We Dance? Welfarist Incorporation and the Politics of State–Labour NGO Relations*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 August 2015

Jude Howell*
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science. Email: [email protected].

Abstract

Relations between the state and labour NGOs in China have been particularly fraught. In 2012, they took an interesting turn when some local governments made overtures to labour NGOs to cooperate in providing services to migrant workers. This article argues that this shift is part of a broader strategy of “welfarist incorporation” to redraw the social contract between state and labour. There are two key elements to this strategy: first, a relaxation of the registration regulations for social organizations, and second, governmental purchasing of services from social organizations. These overtures have both a state and market logic to maintain social control and stabilize relations of production.

摘要

在中国, 国家与劳工非政府组织的关系一直格外令人忧虑。2012 年, 两者关系发生了戏剧性的反转。一些地方政府主动向劳工非政府组织表示, 愿意与之合作为外来工提供服务。本文指出, 这一转变是内容更为丰富的 “福利化社团” 战略的一部分, 目的是重订国家与劳工之间的社会契约。它包含两大基本要素; 其一、放宽对社会组织登记管理的规定; 其二、政府向社会组织购买服务。这些举措包含着意在保持社会控制和稳定生产关系的国家与市场的双重逻辑。

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 2015 

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.)

Footnotes

*

I am grateful for comments of participants on a presentation of this paper at a seminar at the Australian National University (ANU) in September 2014, to the ANU for hosting this visit, and to the Fairbank Center, Harvard, for providing an intellectual environment for data analysis and writing. Thanks are also due to Dr Yue Jianyong for his translation of the abstract.

References

Ahmed, Shamim, and Potter, David M.. 2006. NGOs in International Politics. Bloomfield, CT: Kumarian Press.Google Scholar
Blanchard, Ben, and Ruwitch, John. 2013. “China hikes defense budget to spend more on internal security,” Reuters, 5 March.Google Scholar
Buckley, Chris. 2012. “China domestic security spending rises to US$111 billion,” Reuters, 5 March.Google Scholar
Chan, Anita. 2001. China's Workers under Assault. Exploitation and Abuse in a Globalizing Economy. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Chan, Chak Kwan, Ngok, King Lun and Phillips, David. 2008. Social Policy in China. Development and Well-being. Bristol: The Policy Press.Google Scholar
Chan, Chris King-chi. 2012. “Community-based organizations for migrant workers’ rights: the emergence of labour NGOs in China.” Journal of Community Development 48(1), 622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Feng. 2004. “Legal mobilization by trade unions: the case of Shanghai.” The China Journal 52, 2745.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, Feng. 2007. “Individual rights and collective rights: labour's predicament in China.” Journal of Communist and Post-Communist Studies 40(1), 5979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheng, Joseph S., Ngok, King Lun and Zhuang, Wenjia. 2010. “The survival and development space for China's labour NGOs: informal politics and its uncertainty.” Asian Survey 50(6), 10821106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chu, Songyan. 2014. “Bridging or embedding: the dilemma of social organizations in China.” Paper presented at conference on “Governance, adaptability and system stability under contemporary one-party rule,” Nanchang University, with China Centre for Global Governance and Development at the Central Compilation and Translation Bureau, Beijing, and the University of Duisburg, 27–29 March 2014.Google Scholar
Crane, George T. 1990. The Political Economy of China's Special Economic Zones. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Du, Xiaotian, Renwang, Zhang and Jun, He. 2012. “Labour NGOs: growing pains,” Nanfang ribao, 3 September. Translated in China Development Brief, September 2012, www.chinadevelopmentbrief.cn.Google Scholar
Ford, Michele. 2006. “Labour NGOs: an alternative form of labour organizing in Indonesia, 1991–1998.” Asia Pacific Business Review 12(2), 175191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forsythe, Michael. 2011. “China's spending on internal police force in 2010 outstrips defence budget,” Bloomberg News, 6 March.Google Scholar
Friedman, Eli. 2009. “External pressure and local mobilization: transnational activism and the emergence of the Chinese labour movement.” Mobilization: An International Journal 14(2), 199218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, Eli, and Lee, Ching Kwan. 2010. “Remaking the world of Chinese labour: a 30-year retrospective.” The British Journal of Industrial Relations 48(3), 507533.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Froissart, Chloé. 2011. “‘NGOs’ defending migrant workers’ rights: semi-union organizations contribute to the regime's dynamic stability.” China Perspectives 2, 1825.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
He, Alex Jingwei. 2008. “South China's emerging grassroots NGOs in migrant labour rights. A preliminary investigation in the Pearl River Delta.” Working Paper No. SPP03-08, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, Singapore.Google Scholar
He, Zengke. 2014. “From social management to social governance: discourse change and policy adjustment.” Paper presented at conference on “Governance, adaptability and system stability under contemporary one-party rule,” Nanchang University, with China Centre for Global Governance and Development at the Central Compilation and Translation Bureau, Beijing, and the University of Duisburg, 27–29 March 2014.Google Scholar
Hildebrandt, Timothy. 2011. “The political economy of social organization registration in China.” The China Quarterly 208, 970989.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howell, Jude. 1993. China Opens Its Doors: The Politics of Economic Transition. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner.Google Scholar
Howell, Jude. 2003. “New directions in civil society: organising around marginalised interests.” In Howell, Jude (ed.), Governance in China. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Howell, Jude. 2008. “ACFTU: beyond reform? The slow march of direct elections.” The China Quarterly 196, 845863.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howell, Jude. 2009. “Civil society and migrants in China.” In Murphy, Rachel (ed.), Labour Migration and Social Development in Contemporary China. London: Routledge, 171194.Google Scholar
Howell, Jude. 2012. “Civil society, corporatism and capitalism in China.” The Journal of Comparative Asian Development 11(2), 271277.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howell, Jude, and Pearce, Jenny. 2001. Civil Society and Development. A Critical Interrogation. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
IHLO (ITUC/GUF Hong Kong Liaison Office). 2011a. “Guangdong government implements new scheme to promote civil society organisations and outsourcing of social services,” November, http://www.ihlo.org/LRC/Laws/011111.html. Accessed 24 June 2015.Google Scholar
IHLO. 2011b. “Regularising social organisations as a pre-condition to collective negotiation and mediation of social relations – recent social governance reforms in Guangdong province,” November, http://www.ihlo.org/LRC/SW/011111.html. Accessed 24 June 2015.Google Scholar
IHLO. 2012. “Guangdong Provincial Trade Union forms the first federation of labour NGOs,” May, www.ihlo.org/LRC/ACFTU/000512.HTML. Accessed 24 June 2015.Google Scholar
Jia, Xijin, and Ming, Su. 2009. Policy Study on Government Procurement of Public Services in the People's Republic of China. Beijing: Asian Development Bank.Google Scholar
Kamat, Sangeeta. 2004. “The privatization of public interest: theorizing NGO discourse in a neo-liberal era.” Review of International Political Economy 11(1), 155176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Ching Kwan, and Shen, Yuan. 2011. “The anti-solidarity machine? Labour non-governmental organizations in China.” In Kuruvilla, Sarosh, Lee, Ching Kwan and Gallagher, Mary E. (eds.), From Iron Rice Bowl to Informalization: Markets, Workers and the State in a Changing China. Ithaca, NY: ILR and Cornell University Press, 173187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leung, Wing-Yue. 1988. Smashing the Iron Rice Pot. Workers and Unions in China's Market Socialism. Hong Kong: Asia Monitor Resource Centre.Google Scholar
Li, Qiang, and Yaming, Lin. 2012. “3,628 ge shehui zuzhi ‘baotuan’ guan'ai nü er” (3,628 social organizations come together to care for women and children), Nanfang ribao, 28 May, epaper.nfdaily.cn/html/2012-05/28/content-7088082. Accessed 4 February 2014.Google Scholar
Lin, Ximing. 2012. “Lin Ximing zai gonghui goujian shuniu xing shehui zuzhi luntan shang de jianghua” (Lin Ximing's speech at a forum on the TU construction of hub of social organizations), 14 September, [email protected]. Accessed on 2 February 2014.Google Scholar
Molyneux, Maxine. 1985. “Mobilization without emancipation? Women's interests, states and revolution in Nicaragua.” Feminist Studies 11(2), 227254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pringle, Tim, and Clarke, Simon. 2011. The Challenge of Transition. Trade Unions in Russia, China and Vietnam. Basingstoke, Hants: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pun, Ngai, and Huilin, Lu. 2010. “Unfinished proletarianization: self, anger, and class action among the second generation of peasant-workers in present-day China.” Modern China 36, 493519.Google Scholar
Robinson, Mark. 1997. “Privatizing the voluntary sector: NGOs as public service contractors.” In Hulme, David and Edwards, Michael (eds), NGOs, States and Donors: Too Close for Comfort? New York: St. Martin's Press.Google Scholar
Schmitter, Philippe C. 1979. “Still a century of corporatism?” In Schmitter, Philippe C. and Lehmbruch, Gerhard (eds.), Trends towards Corporatist Intermediation. London: Sage, 85129.Google Scholar
Shambaugh, David. 2010. China's Communist Party. Atrophy and Adaptation. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Sheehan, Jackie. 1998. Chinese Workers. A New History. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Takahara, Akio. 1992. The Politics of Wage Policy in Post-revolutionary China. Basingstoke, Hants: Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, Bill, Kai, Chang and Qi, Li. 2003. Industrial Relations in China. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tilly, Chris, Agarwala, Rina, Mosoetsa, Sarah, Ngai, Pun, Salas, Carlos and Sheikh, Hina. 2013. “Final Report: Informal worker organizing as a strategy for improving sub-contracted work in the textile and apparel industries of Brazil, South Africa, India and China.” Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, University of California.Google Scholar
Tomba, Luigi. 2006. Social Space and Governance in Urban China: The Danwei System from Origins to Reform. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Unger, Jonathan (ed.). 2008. Associations and the Chinese State: Contested Spaces. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Unger, Jonathan, and Chan, Anita. 1995a. “China, corporatism and the East Asian model.” The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 33, 2953.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Unger, Jonathan, and Chan, Anita. 1995b. “Corporatism in China: a developmental state in an East Asian context.” In McCormick, Barrett L. and Unger, Jonathan (eds.), China after Socialism. In the Footsteps of Eastern Europe or East Asia? Armonk, NY: East Gate Books, 95129.Google Scholar
Walder, Andrew. 1986. Communist Neo-traditionalism: Work and Authority in Chinese Industry. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wilson, Jeanne L. 1990a. “The Polish lesson: China and Poland 1980–1990.” Studies in Comparative Communism 23(3–4), 259280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, Jeanne L. 1990b. “Labour policy in China: reform and retrogression.” Problems of Communism 90, 4465.Google Scholar
White, Gordon. 1987. “The politics of economic reform in Chinese industry: the introduction of the labour contract system.” The China Quarterly 111, 365389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Gordon, Howell, Jude and Shang, Xiaoyuan. 1996. In Search of Civil Society: Market Reform and Social Change in Contemporary China. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xie, Chunlei. 2002. “Wailai gong zizhi zuzhi chuxian Zhejiang Ruian” (Migrant workers’ self-organization first appeared in Ruian, Zhejiang), Nanfang zhoumou, 7 April.Google Scholar
Xie, Yue. 2013. “Rising central spending on public security and the dilemma facing grassroots officials in China.” Journal of Current Chinese Affairs 42(2), 79109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xu, Yi. 2013. “Labour non-governmental organizations in China: mobilizing rural migrant workers.” Journal of Industrial Relations 55(2), 243259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yep, Raymond. 2000. “The limitations of corporatism for understanding reforming China: an empirical analysis in a rural county.” Journal of Contemporary China 9(25), 547566.CrossRefGoogle Scholar