Liyiyu | Abhijit Dasgupta

This book deals with the dynamics of local-level
politics in China and India. China introduced new policies to restructure local
politics in 1978. In place of communes, civil society organizations and
cooperatives were introduced in villages. More changes came about with the
introduction of the Organic Law of the Villagers' Committees of the People's
Republic of China in 1998. The new local power structure includes state-sponsored
institutions like Villagers Committees and the traditional civil society
organizations (CSOs) and non-government organizations (NGOs). As in China,
local politics in India undergoes considerable changes during the last few
decades. Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) were reformed in 1992 with a
constitutional amendment act. CSOs and NGOs were allowed to function. Against
this background, the present book is undertaken with the objectives first, to
present two different models of local politics and second, to compare the two,
finally to focus on the two different models of development. This book will
interest scholars of rural governance, rural transformation, and the role of
the grassroots CSOs and NGOs in shaping development program and growth in the
two large countries in Asia.
1. Introduction
2. Civil Society Organizations in China
3. Transformations of the Civil Society
Organizations
4. Civil Society Organizations and the
State
5. Local Power Structure in an Indian
State
6. Civil Society Organizations in West
Bengal
7. Conclusions
Liyiyu is Professor of Public Administration and
currently Director, Comparative Research Centre, School of Law and Politics,
Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, China. She has published several books and
articles including Rural Civil Society and Rural Development in China: Case
Studies (2006), A Comparative Study on Chinese Traditional Administrative
Culture Models (2010), and A Comparative Study of Social Governance in China
and India (2016). Abhijit Dasgupta formerly a Professor of Sociology at
the Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi. He has published several
papers on agrarian relations in West Bengal and Bangladesh, population
displacement, and affirmative action with reference to the minorities in South
Asia. He is Author of Growth with Equity: the New Technology and Agrarian
Change in Bengal (1998); Displacement and Exile: The State-Refugee Relations in
India (2016) and Co-editor of the following books: Minorities and the State:
Changing Social and Political Landscape of Bengal (2011) and Family and Kinship
among Muslims in Bengal (2021).
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