Abstract
In semi-industrialized rural China, villagers are getting together to create their own micro welfare state. In response to inadequate state support for the poor, disabled, and especially elderly of the village, entrepreneurs form rotating credit associations and underground banks that finance welfare schemes exclusively for those who hold a household residency in their village. Most of these schemes eschew any formal engagement with the state, but where money, legitimacy, and social stability are involved, the state is never far away. Th is paper examines the development and propagation of these highly successful nonstate welfare funds in parallel to the seminally unsuccessful state efforts at encouraging philanthropy, and reports on recent state efforts to co-opt and control this flourishing, indirectly contentious, civil movement. Th e fairly gentle nature of state-society interactions to date shrouds an implicit contest over political space at the grassroots level.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 151-178 |
Journal | China Review (HK) |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 2 |
Publication status | Published - 2017 |