State rescaling, policy experimentation and path dependency in post-Mao China: a dynamic analytical framework
This paper evaluates the applicability of the state rescaling framework for framing politico-economic evolution in China. It then presents an analytical framework that examines institutional change as driven by the dynamic entwinement of state rescaling, place-specific policy experimentation and ins...
| Main Author: | |
|---|---|
| Format: | Article |
| Published: |
Taylor and Francis
2017
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/42924/ |
| Summary: | This paper evaluates the applicability of the state rescaling framework for framing politico-economic evolution in China. It then presents an analytical framework that examines institutional change as driven by the dynamic entwinement of state rescaling, place-specific policy experimentation and institutional path dependency. The framework problematizes simple ‘transition’ models that portray a mechanistic ‘upward’ or ‘downward’ reconfiguration of regulatory relations after market-like rule was instituted in 1978. It emphasizes, instead, a more established pattern of development marked simultaneously by geographically distinct (and enduring) institutional forms and experimental (and capricious) attempts to transcend them. |
|---|