ABSTRACT

To a degree insufficiently captured by the term governance, the present age is one of institutional complexity. China is a case in point. An amalgam of socialist, capitalist, corporatist, and pluralist characteristics, China's systems of governance defy classification using extant categories in the institutionalist literature. What, after all, is a socialist market system?

A Phenomenology of Institutions begins with the problem of describing emergent institutional phenomena using conventional typologies. Constructing a new descriptive framework for rendering new, hybrid, and flexible institutional designs, Raul Lejano, Jia Guo, Hongping Lian, and Bo Yin propose new descriptors, involving concepts of autopoeisis, textuality, and relationality, that might better describe new and emergent models of governance. The authors illustrate the utility of this framework with a number of case studies, each dealing with a different aspect of Chinese legal and civic institutions and comparing these with 'Western' models.

This book will be a valuable resource for institutional scholars in the fields of public policy, political science, organization studies, public administration, and international development, studying new and emergent forms of governance.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

The Phenomenology of Institutional Innovation

chapter 3|14 pages

Governing by Metaphor

The Intertextuality of Institutional Life in China

chapter 4|30 pages

Relationality in Rural Property Regimes

chapter 5|16 pages

Relational Institutions and ENGOs in China

From Nu River to Changzhou

chapter 6|45 pages

Multiple Legal Traditions, Legal Pluralism and Institutional Innovation

The Chinese Criminal Procedure System in Contrast

chapter 7|9 pages

Conclusion

China, the Looking-Glass