Description
Based on six-year ethnographic research across China, it examines how millions of Chinese homeowners practice democracy and the party-state's responses.
About the Author
Shitong Qiao is is Professor of Law and Ken Young-Gak Yun and Jinah Park Yun Research Scholar at Duke University. He also taught property and comparative law at the University of Hong Kong and New York University and was Law and Public Affairs Fellow at Princeton University. He received his law degrees from Wuhan (LLB), Peking (MPhil) and Yale (LLM and JSD). He has published numerous articles in the top Chinese and US law journals and a prize-winning book about law and marketization, Chinese Small Property: The Co-Evolution of Law and Social Norms (Cambridge University Press, 2017).
Reviews
'In this fascinating study, Qiao documents and insightfully analyzes how the development of homeowners' associations (HoAs) in China generated an ongoing democratic revolution in hundreds of thousands of neighborhoods. This book is a must-read for students of China, of the emergence of democracy, and of property theory.' Hanoch Dagan, UC Berkeley School of Law
'To truly know a country, you have to know how it divides up control and power over that one universal asset: land. The Authoritarian Commons: Neighborhood Democratization in Urban China is a brilliant study of the fights over, and the startling persistence of, homeowners' associations in China. It is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand either modern China or the relationship between local and national governance more broadly.' David Schleicher, Professor, Yale Law School
'By showing us how Chinese homeowners have been able to develop a rich and effective associational life, Qiao opens up a new lens for our understanding of Chinese authoritarianism. A superb and illuminating study that will be of interest to property scholars as well as students of authoritarian governance.' Tom Ginsburg, Leo Spitz Distinguished Service Professor of International Law, Ludwig and Hilde Wolf Research Scholar, The University of Chicago Law School
'Shitong Qiao's insightful book presents a compelling examination of how homeowners' associations (HoAs) have evolved into entities that negotiate with state authority, reshaping the governance of urban communities. Through detailed case studies of Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen, Qiao examines how property rights, local governance, and civic engagement intersect, offering an invaluable lens on civic participation under an authoritarian regime. In particular, Qiao's study of the HoAs' role during China's COVID lockdowns highlights the capabilities and limits of self-governance in urban neighborhoods.' Dali L. Yang, William Claude Reavis Professor of Political Science, The University of Chicago, and author of Wuhan: How the Covid-19 Outbreak Spiraled out of Control (2024)
Book Information
ISBN 9781108840279
Author Shitong Qiao
Format Hardback
Page Count 280
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press