Studies of local governance in China often point to nimble experimentation but problematic implementation. To reconcile these competing images, it is useful to clarify the concepts of experimentation and implementation and see how they unfolded in one policy area. The history of China’s Open Government Information (OGI) initiative shows that the experimentation stage sometimes proceeds well and produces new policy options, but may falter if local leaders are unwilling to carry out an experiment. And the implementation stage often poses challenges, but may improve if the Center initiates new, small-scale experiments and encourages local innovation. This suggests that the experimentation and implementation stages are not so different when officials in Beijing and the localities have diverging interests and the Center is more supportive of a measure than local officials. The ups and downs of OGI, and also village elections, can be traced to the policy goal of monitoring local cadres, the central–local divide, and the pattern of support and opposition within the state.
Understanding Experimentation and Implementation: A Case Study of China’s Government Transparency Policy
Jieun Kim is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for the Study of Contemporary China, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA and will be an Assistant Professor at NYU Shanghai beginning in the Fall of 2022. Email: <[email protected]>
Kevin J. O’Brien is the Alann P. Bedford Professor of Asian Studies and Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. We thank John Yasuda for his feedback on an earlier draft, and the scholars and staff at the Center for Public Participation Studies and Support, Beijing University, for their help in arranging Jieun Kim’s interviews in China. We also acknowledge generous support from the Center for Chinese Studies, University of California, Berkeley. Email: <[email protected]>
Jieun Kim, Kevin J. O’Brien; Understanding Experimentation and Implementation: A Case Study of China’s Government Transparency Policy. Asian Survey 1 August 2021; 61 (4): 591–614. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2021.61.4.591
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