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A survey study of voting behavior and political participation in Zhejiang

journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Baogang HeBaogang He
Two existing models are used to conceptualize the constrained and limited participation in the communist system. The mobilization model suggests that participation was so mobilized by the party/state that it was largely meaningless, while the disengagement model supports the idea that many communist citizens adopted non-participatory behaviors such as non-voting as a means of protest. This paper attempts to demonstrate the importance of a third model – the emergent democratic culture model. The survey results show that the participation index is in proportion to the number of elections in which a villager is involved; and a growing number of voters in Zhejiang are developing citizen-initiated participation, with rights consciousness.

This research finds that the level of participation is influenced by three major factors: the perceived worth of the election itself, regularity of electoral procedures, and the fairness of electoral procedures. It also finds that parochial political culture and political apathy still exist, and the emergent democratic consciousness falls short of an ideal democratic standard. While a highly democratic culture helps to develop village democracy, the apathetic attitude continues to support the authoritarian leadership and structure in many villages. The paper also gives an account of survey research in rural China and offers a thoughtful critique of the use of voting and non-voting as the sole indicator of political participation.

History

Journal

Japanese journal of political science

Volume

7

Issue

3

Pagination

225 - 246

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, England

ISSN

1468-1099

eISSN

1474-0060

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

Cambridge University Press

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