Publication | Closed Access
The authoritarian logic of regulatory pluralism: Understanding<scp>C</scp>hina's new environmental actors
112
Citations
66
References
2014
Year
Regulatory LandscapeEnvironmental LawRegulatory PluralismSustainable DevelopmentLawEnvironmental PlanningAuthoritarian LogicEnvironmental LegislationEconomic InstitutionsEnvironmental PolicyPolitical EcologySocial SciencesPolitical ScienceGovernment RegulationEnvironmental ManagementReflexive Environmental GovernanceEnvironmental GovernancePublic PolicyPublic InstitutionsEnvironmental PoliticsEnvironmental JusticePolicy StudiesPolitical PluralismRegulatory EnvironmentRegulationInternational Institutions
Abstract Over the last decade, C hinese citizens, judges, and prosecutors have started to take action against industrial pollution, pluralizing a regulatory landscape originally occupied by administrative agencies. Regulatory pluralism here has an authoritarian logic, occurring without the retreat of party‐state control. Under such logic, the party‐state both needs and fears new actors for their positive and negative roles in controlling risk and maintaining stability. Consequently, the regime's relation to regulatory pluralism is ambivalent, shifting between support and restriction. This prevents a development of a regulatory society that could bypass the regulatory state. Theoretically, this special edition argues for a subjective definition of regulation in a context of pluralism. Moreover, it finds that regulatory pluralism need not coincide with a decentring of regulation. Finally, it highlights how entry onto the regulatory landscape affects the non‐regulatory roles of new actors, creating unintended consequences for regulatory pluralism.
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