Join us for a free one-day workshop for educators at the Japanese American National Museum, hosted by the USC U.S.-China Institute and the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia. This workshop will include a guided tour of the beloved exhibition Common Ground: The Heart of Community, slated to close permanently in January 2025. Following the tour, learn strategies for engaging students in the primary source artifacts, images, and documents found in JANM’s vast collection and discover classroom-ready resources to support teaching and learning about the Japanese American experience.
The Art of Authoritarian Rule: Informal Institutions and State Capacity in China
The University of Pennsylvania Center for the Study of Contemporary China presents a talk on the institutions used by the Chinese government to pressure citizens.
Where
All authoritarian regimes require some amount of compliance from the citizens they rule. Yet relying on coercion alone to elicit political obedience is impractical. How, then, do authoritarian rulers persuade citizens to obey them? Dan Mattingly argues that authoritarian states are most powerful when they can harness informal norms and group solidarity as a tool of political control. He will examine three hard cases of control in China: land requisitions, tax collection, and state family planning policies. Mattingly will show that when local communal elites, such as the leaders of lineages or clans, are included in local political institutions, the ability of the state to implement these costly and sometimes coercive policies increases dramatically. This finding challenges the conventional wisdom that communal and civic ties in China are ways for citizens to pressure the state from the bottom up. Instead, he argues, communal and social solidarity help the state to pressure citizens from the top down. China's extraordinary state capacity relies on local brokers who can use social ties and participatory institutions to persuade, cajole, and coerce their group into complying with the state.
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Please join us for the Grad Mixer! Hosted by USC Annenberg Office of International Affairs, Enjoy food, drink and conversation with fellow students across USC Annenberg. Graduate students from any field are welcome to join, so it is a great opportunity to meet fellow students with IR/foreign policy-related research topics and interests.
RSVP link: https://forms.gle/1zer188RE9dCS6Ho6
Events
Hosted by USC Annenberg Office of International Affairs, enjoy food, drink and conversation with fellow international students.
Join us for an in-person conversation on Thursday, November 7th at 4pm with author David M. Lampton as he discusses his new book, Living U.S.-China Relations: From Cold War to Cold War. The book examines the history of U.S.-China relations across eight U.S. presidential administrations.