Prof. Chen XiAssociate Professor LLB (ECUPL), MPhil (Peking), MA, PhD (Columbia) |
Xi Chen received his Ph.D. from Columbia University. He is the author of Social Protest and Contentious Authoritarianism in China (2012), and is currently completing another book, Disempowering Contention: Restructuring, Resistance, and State Domination in China. He has also published articles in journals such as Comparative Politics, Comparative Political Studies, Politics and Society, the China Quarterly, and the Journal of Democracy. |
Publications | Grants |
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T: (852) 3943-7553 |
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- Social Protest and Contentious Authoritarianism in China (Cambridge University Press, 2012. Paperback 2014).
- Disempowering Contention: Privatization, Resistance, and State Domination in China. Under contract at Cambridge University Press (Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics).
- “Elitism and Exclusion in Mass Protest: Privatization, Resistance, and State Domination in China,” Comparative Political Studies 50, no. 7 (2017): 908-934.
- “Origins of Informal Coercion in China,” Politics and Society 45, no. 1 (2017): 67-89.
- "Authoritarian Regimes and Social Movements,” in the Blackwell Companion to Social Movements, eds., by David A. Snow, Sarah A. Soule, Hanspeter Kriesi, and Holly J. McCammon (Wiley Blackwell, forthcoming) (co-authored with Dana Moss).
- “Cooptation, Trust and Protest Leadership: Workers’ Mobilization during Industrial Restructuring in China,” in Urban mobilization and new media in contemporary China, eds., by Hanspeter Kriesi, Daniel Kübler and Lisheng Dong (Ashgate, 2015): 133-150.
- "China at the Tipping Point: The Rising Cost of Stability," Journal of Democracy 24, no. 1 (2013): 57-64.
- “From Resistance to Advocacy: Political Representation for Disabled People in China,” China Quarterly 207 (September 2011): 649-667 (co-authored with Ping Xu).
- “State-generated Data and the Study of Contentious Politics in China,” in Chinese Politics: New Methods, Sources and Field strategies, eds., by Allen Carlson, Mary Gallagher, Kenneth Lieberthal, and Melanie Manion (Cambridge University Press, 2010): 15-32.
- “The Power of Troublemaking: Protest Tactics and Their Efficacy in China”, Comparative Politics 41: 4 (July 2009): 451-471.
- “Institutional Conversion and Collective Petitioning in China”, in Popular Protest in China, ed., by Kevin O’Brien (Harvard University Press, 2008): 54-70.
- “Between Resistance and Submissiveness: Protest Opportunism in China”, in Grassroots Political Reform in Contemporary China,eds., by Elizabeth Perry and Merle Goldman (Harvard University Press, 2007): 253-281.
- “Authoritarian Regimes and Social Movements,” in the Blackwell Companion to Social Movements, eds., by David A. Snow, Sarah A. Soule, Hanspeter Kriesi, and Holly J. McCammon (Wiley Blackwell, forthcoming) (co-authored with Dana Moss).
- “Cooptation, Trust and Protest Leadership: Workers’ Mobilization during Industrial Restructuring in China,” in Urban mobilization and new media in contemporary China, eds., by Hanspeter Kriesi, Daniel Kübler and Lisheng Dong (Ashgate, 2015): 133-150.
RGC General Research Fund (GRF), Hong Kong, 2018-2019