
Politics of Legitimacy
State-Society Relations and Patterns of Chinese Politics
Dingxin Zhao(Author)
University of Chicago Press
Will be published approx. on 22. July 2026
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-0-226-82930-2 (ISBN)
Description
A sweeping work on China that interrogates how states gain, maintain, and lose legitimacy.
The Chinese communist state has survived massive social changes, including the introduction of capitalist markets, an ongoing explosion of technological innovation, and an unprecedented jump in wealth and education, accompanied by a major cultural transformation. How has China managed to maintain its power even as the ground has so profoundly shifted? In Politics of Legitimacy, Dingxin Zhao argues that state power can be legitimized in three ideal-typical ways: a set of values upheld by the state (ideological legitimacy), recognized political processes such as regular competitive elections (procedural legitimacy), and the state's capacity to provide public goods (performance legitimacy).
Building on this theoretical framework, Zhao analyzes different aspects of Chinese politics, including the tragic ending of the 1989 pro-democracy movement, the weak development of mass-based nationalism in post-Mao China, the reasons behind China's economic success, the anti-establishment tendency of the Chinese mass media and social media, and the sources of political tension in China, despite a superb economy. Moreover, Zhao's innovative framework is widely applicable beyond China, shifting our attention from regime-type categories to the tools and relationships that determine their survival or collapse, and illuminating the current global emergence of conservatism and religious nationalism.
The Chinese communist state has survived massive social changes, including the introduction of capitalist markets, an ongoing explosion of technological innovation, and an unprecedented jump in wealth and education, accompanied by a major cultural transformation. How has China managed to maintain its power even as the ground has so profoundly shifted? In Politics of Legitimacy, Dingxin Zhao argues that state power can be legitimized in three ideal-typical ways: a set of values upheld by the state (ideological legitimacy), recognized political processes such as regular competitive elections (procedural legitimacy), and the state's capacity to provide public goods (performance legitimacy).
Building on this theoretical framework, Zhao analyzes different aspects of Chinese politics, including the tragic ending of the 1989 pro-democracy movement, the weak development of mass-based nationalism in post-Mao China, the reasons behind China's economic success, the anti-establishment tendency of the Chinese mass media and social media, and the sources of political tension in China, despite a superb economy. Moreover, Zhao's innovative framework is widely applicable beyond China, shifting our attention from regime-type categories to the tools and relationships that determine their survival or collapse, and illuminating the current global emergence of conservatism and religious nationalism.
Reviews / Votes
"Zhao is one of the few intellectuals equally at home in China and the West. His careful analysis of how states maintain their legitimacy helps us to understand why China's political model has been so successful to date, and why its greatest challenges may lie just ahead."-- Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason University
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Chicago
United States
Publishing group
The University of Chicago Press
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
1 halftones, 2 tables
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-226-82930-2 (9780226829302)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Dingxin Zhao is the Max Palevsky Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Chicago and director of the Center for Advanced Studies in Humanities at Zhejiang University. Matthew Turner and Haiying Weng are freelance translators. In addition to translating news and cultural commentary for Sixth Tone Media, they co-translated The Logic of Chinese Behavior by Zhai Xuwei, Berlin Reflections by Yan Jun, and Facing the Era of Great Transformation by Wu Jinglian, among others.
Content
Introduction
Part 1: Theoretical Exploration
Chapter 1: Sources of Political Legitimacy and Patterns of State-Society Relations
Chapter 2: The Mandate of Heaven and Performance Legitimation in Historical and Contemporary China
Chapter 3: The Vitality and Limits of Democracy and China's Way Forward
Part 2: State Legitimacy and Economic Development
Chapter 4: The Defensive Regime and Modernization
Chapter 5: Performance Legitimacy and China's Economic Miracle
Chapter 6: Path Independence and Policy Irrelevance: The Key of China's Economic Success
Part 3: Legitimacy and Pattern of Protest
Chapter 7: Sources of State Legitimacy and Development of the 1989 Student Movement
Chapter 8: Student Protest After the Bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade
Chapter 9: Is There a Danger of Revolution in China Today?
Part 4: State Legitimacy, Media, and Public Opinion
Chapter 10: News Media and Social Movements Without Hegemonic Culture
Chapter 11: Social Media and the London Riots
Chapter 12: Weibo, Public Spaces, and China's Development
Conclusion
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Part 1: Theoretical Exploration
Chapter 1: Sources of Political Legitimacy and Patterns of State-Society Relations
Chapter 2: The Mandate of Heaven and Performance Legitimation in Historical and Contemporary China
Chapter 3: The Vitality and Limits of Democracy and China's Way Forward
Part 2: State Legitimacy and Economic Development
Chapter 4: The Defensive Regime and Modernization
Chapter 5: Performance Legitimacy and China's Economic Miracle
Chapter 6: Path Independence and Policy Irrelevance: The Key of China's Economic Success
Part 3: Legitimacy and Pattern of Protest
Chapter 7: Sources of State Legitimacy and Development of the 1989 Student Movement
Chapter 8: Student Protest After the Bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade
Chapter 9: Is There a Danger of Revolution in China Today?
Part 4: State Legitimacy, Media, and Public Opinion
Chapter 10: News Media and Social Movements Without Hegemonic Culture
Chapter 11: Social Media and the London Riots
Chapter 12: Weibo, Public Spaces, and China's Development
Conclusion
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index