Nail-Houses, Land Rights, and Frames of Injustice on China's Protest Landscape
暂无分享,去创建一个
This article highlights the way in which Chinese protestors resisting home eviction and demolition have begun to develop innovative, media-savvy tactics for winning public sympathy for their causes and framing their plights as unjust, and considers the political implications of this trend.
[1] Yong Shun Cai,et al. Against the Law: Labor Protests in China's Rustbelt and Sunbelt , 2009 .
[2] Andrew C. Mertha. From ‘Rustless Screws’ to ‘Nail Houses’: The Evolution of Property Rights in China , 2009 .
[3] M. Blecher. Hegemony and Workers' Politics in China , 2002, The China Quarterly.
[4] D. Solinger. Labour Market Reform and the Plight of the Laid-off Proletariat , 2002, The China Quarterly.