01892nam 2200445Ka 450 991101051800332120250703100016.80-472-90509-0(CKB)38859493500041(ODN)ODN0011937159(MiAaPQ)EBC32154305(Au-PeEL)EBL32154305(EXLCZ)993885949350004120250526d2025 uy 0engurcn|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierPolitical trust in china /Lianjiang Li1st ed.Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press20251 online resourceTitle from eBook information screen..0-472-07752-X 0-472-05752-9 The authoritarian regime in China is a prime target of the US-led war on autocracy; however, the regime claims a majority of the Chinese people trust the government, with national surveys since the 1990s supporting this assertion. How much do Chinese citizens actually trust the one-party regime? Instead of dismissing survey results, Li examines the contexts in which Chinese citizens are predisposed to say they trust the government. He argues that political trust in China is a power-accommodating and nonbinding hope rather than a rights-based and binding expectation as Chinese citizens do not have the right to grant and retract trust through free and fair elections.NonfictionOverDrivePoliticsOverDriveNonfiction.Politics.POL000000POL007000POL054000bisacshLi Lianjiang1831559MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911010518003321Political trust in china4403974UNINA