Front cover image for Village governance in North China, 1875-1936

Village governance in North China, 1875-1936

Huaiyin Li
This book is about village governance in China during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Drawing on government archives from Huailu county, Hebei province, it explores local practices and official systems of social control, land taxation, and "self government" at the village level. Its analysis of peasant behaviors bridges the gap between the rational choice and moral economy models by taking into account both material and symbolic dimensions of power and interest in the peasant community. The author's interpretation of village/state relations before 1900 transcends the state and society dichotomy and accentuates the interplay between formal and informal institutions and practices. His account of "state making" after 1900 underscores the continuity of endogenous arrangements in the course of institutional formalization and the interpenetration between official discourse and popular notions in the new process of political legitimization
eBook, English, 2005
Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif., 2005
1 online resource (xii, 325 pages) : maps
9781423716679, 9780804750912, 1423716671, 0804750912
61248139
Introduction
The setting
Cooperation and control in the peasant community
Rules, self interest, and strategies
Tax collection
Land and tax administration
Power, discourse, and legitimacy
Cooperation and conflict over village schools
Elite activism
Village reorganization
Uncovering "black land."