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    You are at:Home»Faculty»Sinica Podcast: China’s Authoritarian Revival, Explained by Carl Minzner

    Sinica Podcast: China’s Authoritarian Revival, Explained by Carl Minzner

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    By Newsroom on March 8, 2018 Faculty, In the News

    Carl Minzner appeared in a Sinica podcast where he discusses his new book End of an Era and the current political landscape in China. China’s Communist Party recently announced that it intends to abolish term limits on the presidency, which will help President Xi Jinping stay in power indefinitely.

    As Carl Minzner, professor of law at Fordham University, explains, the abolition of term limits for Xi was only the latest — and easiest for non-China specialists to understand — of many signs that China was heading down the path to strengthening its one-Party and one-man rule to an extent not seen since Mao. He details this path, and why he thinks it is limiting China’s development, in his new book, End of an Era: How China’s Authoritarian Revival Is Undermining Its Rise.

    Unlike many commentators, Carl sees the signs of China’s illiberal turn as dating way back before 2008, when the unrest in Tibet in March and Olympics in August of that year demanded greater social control.

    …

    All the while, Carl explores the underlying reasons for China’s hardening and approaches the question with admirable empathy. And though this topic is one that Kaiser and Jeremy have discussed before many times on the show, Carl brings fresh angles to the conversation, including an exploration of how changes in China’s educational system may be restricting social mobility in China.

    Listen to the full podcast.

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