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Party center
Articles
109- The Ant Group IPO Suspension: Financial Innovation Meets Political BoundariesThe suspended listing and later restructuring show how platform finance, data, regulatory authority, and entrepreneur risk can be rapidly reordered.
- From Anti-Corruption to Purge: Governance and Power ReorderingPlacing real corruption enforcement, case selection, personnel replacement, and loyalty reordering in one evidence chain.
- The People's Armed Police: The Boundary Between Internal Security and Military CommandThe armed police conduct counterterrorism, emergency response, and protection of key sites under a system linking military command and domestic security.
- Belt and Road Debt RestructuringDebt problems in major projects involve borrower choices, policy banks, contractors, exchange rates, and domestic politics.
- Growth and Stability Targets: How Cadre Incentives Shape Economic DataLocal cadres face growth, employment, debt, security, and opinion targets whose conflicts encourage data management and downward blame.
- Capital Rectification Campaigns: Why Regulation Becomes PoliticalRegulatory campaigns combine antitrust, data security, education equality, and disorderly capital expansion in one political vocabulary.
- The Central Financial Commission: Moving Financial Risk Into the Party CenterHow the Central Financial Commission and the Central Financial Work Commission connect regulation, personnel control, and political risk.
- Central Financial Commission: Bringing Financial Risk into the Party Leadership ChainSeparating political direction, regulatory execution, central-bank tools, and local risk disposal.
- The Central Foreign Affairs Commission: Foreign Policy Beyond the Foreign MinistryThe Central Foreign Affairs Commission sets major direction and coordinates agencies, while the Foreign Ministry carries out policy and professional diplomacy.
- The Central Military Commission: Direct Party Command of Armed ForceThe Central Military Commission is the organizational center of Party command over the PLA and armed police; military nationalization is not the institutional objective.
- The Central Propaganda Department and Ideological ResponsibilityPropaganda authorities coordinate theory, news, publishing, film, and spiritual-civilization work.
- CIDCA and the Belt and Road: Aid, Lending, and StrategyForeign aid, policy finance, state-firm projects, and diplomatic agreements form the development-cooperation toolkit.
- Civil-Military Fusion: Moving Technology, Capital, and Talent Into DefenseCivil-military fusion seeks to shorten the distance between civilian research, supply chains, and military demand.
- The Politics of Common Prosperity: Redistribution, Donations, and Corporate SignalingCommon prosperity concerns distribution, but it also creates a setting for firms and local governments to signal alignment.
- People's Communes, Grain Procurement, and Information FailureExplaining how inflated output became a subsistence crisis through procurement and collectivization.
- Courts, Procuratorates, and Adjudication CommitteesCourts and procuratorates have professional procedures, but political-legal coordination, Party leadership, adjudication committees, and performance systems shape sensitive cases.
- Covid Heroic Narratives: Reordering Suffering, Sacrifice, and ResponsibilityHeroic narratives can record real labor while moving institutional failure out of public debate.
- The CPPCC and Consultative IncorporationThe CPPCC incorporates parties, sectors, ethnic and religious representatives, and elites into consultation without becoming an independent center of power.
- Cultural-Market Regulation: Publishing, Film, Games, and PerformanceCultural products face content review, licensing, platform distribution, and opinion risk.
- Cultural Revolution Decision Timeline: From the May 16 Circular to the Fall of the Gang of FourOrdering central documents, mass movements, and institutional reconstruction from 1965 to 1976.
- The Boundaries of Cultural Revolution MemoryOfficial narratives condemn turmoil while often limiting inquiry into institutional responsibility, mass organization, and political succession.
- Rehabilitation, Redress, and Memory Management after the Cultural RevolutionAnalyzing rehabilitation, local inquiry, limited accountability, and public narrative.
- The Cultural Revolution: Mass Rebellion, State Reconstruction, and Political PersecutionIntegrating central documents, Red Guards, factional conflict, military intervention, purges, and long-term legacies.
- Estimating Death and Persecution during the Cultural RevolutionComparing gazetteers, internal investigations, local archives, and victim definitions.
- Data as an Economic Control Tool: Bringing Platform Assets Into State GovernanceData classification, cross-border review, algorithm filing, and security assessment change the asset boundaries of platform firms.
- Economic Coercion and Market AccessTrade, tourism, regulation, procurement, and consumer mobilization can impose selective costs in diplomatic disputes.
- The Ministry of Education and Political CurriculumCurriculum standards, textbook review, teacher responsibility, and campus activities embed political education across age groups.
- Entertainment Censorship: Governing Celebrities, Fans, and WorksEntertainment governance combines content, celebrity morality, fan organization, capital, and platform popularity.
- Institutional History, Legal Tools, and Evidence Limits in the Falun Gong CrackdownSeparating the 1999 political decision, legal prohibition, propaganda, detention, and grave-abuse allegations.
- Why Famine Severity Varied across Provinces and CountiesComparing procurement, local leadership, violence, ecology, and mobility.
- Great Famine Mortality: Statistical Perimeters, Ranges, and UncertaintyComparing censuses, vital rates, registration gaps, and local estimates.
- Responsibility, Silence, and Family Memory after the Great FamineAnalyzing cadre accountability, policy adjustment, public narrative, and survivor expression.
- The Qinglang Campaign Against Fan CultureFan-culture governance linked minors, capital, platform traffic, celebrity morality, and organized mobilization.
- Political Priorities in Financial Risk DisposalAnalyzing priorities among project completion, employment, institutional stability, and investor protection.
- Financial-Risk Resolution: Who Is Rescued and Who Absorbs LossesThe resolution of banking, property, local-debt, and shadow-finance risks contains political priorities.
- The Foreign Ministry and Overseas MissionsThe diplomatic system handles negotiation, consular work, information, and public diplomacy while carrying out centrally determined positions.
- CCP Foreign Policy and Global StrategyForeign policy, Taiwan, regional security, international organizations, and global messaging respond to external conditions and serve regime security, nationalism, and development.
- Timeline of CCP Foreign Policy and Taiwan StrategyA timeline of state founding, the UN seat, reform and opening, Taiwan policy, the Belt and Road, and security-centered diplomacy.
- The Global South Narrative: Turning Development Ties Into Political RepresentationDevelopment, anti-colonial, and sovereignty language helps present bilateral ties as broader international representation.
- Great Leap Decision Timeline: From Catch-Up Targets to Economic ReadjustmentReconstructing meetings, campaigns, procurement, and adjustment from 1957 to 1962.
- The Great Leap and Great Famine: Policy, Procurement, and DeathIntegrating central policy, communes, procurement, local violence, demography, and accountability.
- Historical Nihilism: Securitizing Critical HistoryThe label of historical nihilism turns some historical disputes into questions of political position and regime security.
- The Hong Kong Garrison and Symbolic DeterrenceThe presence of the garrison, public exercises, and official statements can change political risk without direct street deployment.
- Hong Kong National Education: Why Curriculum Became an Institutional ConflictThe controversy joined curriculum, school autonomy, social mobilization, and central identity politics.
- Ideological Governance: Who Decides How History and Reality May Be UnderstoodPropaganda, education, cultural markets, academic management, and platform rules jointly define acceptable interpretation.
- Timeline of Ideological and Memory GovernanceA timeline of propaganda institutions, patriotic education, ideological responsibility, cultural regulation, and digital memory control.
- Industrial Policy and Subsidy Allocation: How Strategic Sectors Are ChosenIndustrial funds, tax preferences, procurement, and credit turn political priorities into corporate opportunity.
- Inspection System: How The Center Keeps Local Officials InsecureWhy inspection is not a normal audit but a channel for sending organizational fear into local governments and departments.
- The International Department and Party-to-Party DiplomacyThe International Department builds relationships with parties and political elites through channels distinct from state diplomacy.
- Influence in International OrganizationsThe CCP seeks agenda influence through diplomacy, development coalitions, personnel contests, and conceptual language.
- Managing June Fourth Memory: Commemoration, Search, and Public SpaceControl of June Fourth memory spans archives, education, media, search, commemoration, and physical policing.
- Leading Groups And Commissions: How The CCP Bypasses Ordinary Government ProcedureHow leading groups and commissions pull cross-agency issues into Party-centered decision channels.
- Lithuania and the Taiwan Representative OfficeThe naming dispute was followed by diplomatic downgrading and trade pressure, showing how Taiwan policy can enter supply-chain risk.
- Local Debt and Falling Land Sales: How Fiscal Stress Reaches the GrassrootsFalling land revenue changes the order of local projects, public services, financing vehicles, and grassroots spending.
- Military Anti-Corruption: Purges in the Rocket Force and Equipment SystemPersonnel upheaval in the Rocket Force and equipment system joins procurement corruption, readiness credibility, and top-level control.
- Military Party Committees: Political Organization Inside CommandMilitary Party committees place major development, personnel, and political matters inside collective leadership and commander responsibility.
- Military Procurement Corruption and the Dual Chain of Political PurgeHow procurement, promotion, military discipline, and readiness rectification become connected in anti-corruption campaigns.
- Military Secrecy and Public AccountabilityMilitary secrecy has legitimate scope, but broad security language can obscure budgets, accidents, procurement, and personnel responsibility.
- Model Citizens and Positive Energy: Rewriting Social Problems as Moral StoriesModel-citizen narratives move institutional problems into stories of sacrifice, gratitude, and resilience.
- The National Defense Mobilization System: Bringing Local Government Into War PreparationNational-defense mobilization connects personnel, transport, industry, health, communications, civil defense, and local administration.
- The Holistic National Security Concept: Expanding the Security BoundaryThe holistic national-security concept places political, economic, technological, cultural, social, cyber, and overseas interests in one security vocabulary.
- The National Supervisory Commission and the Discipline SystemThe merged discipline and supervision structure connects internal Party investigation with state supervisory power over public personnel.
- The NDRC and the Planning System: Resource Allocation Beyond MarketsFive-year plans, industrial catalogues, major projects, and pricing policy let the NDRC shape capital and local development.
- The National People's Congress: How Party Policy Enters State LawSeparating NPC constitutional authority, Party direction, drafting, voting, and implementation.
- The Official Copy System: How Media And Platforms Repeat One LineHow official copy, reposting, title templates, and platform recommendation turn one line into synchronized speech.
- Party-History Institutions: Turning Historical Conclusions Into Political ResourcesParty-history research, archive access, commemorations, and authoritative publications determine which interpretations receive institutional support.
- Timeline of Party Control Over the MilitaryA timeline of Party organization in the armed forces, CMC structures, debates over nationalization, reforms, and the chairman responsibility system.
- Timeline of Party Organization and Elite PoliticsA timeline of democratic centralism, Party-state relations, cadre control, discipline, leading groups, and leadership authority.
- The Party-School System: Training Cadres in a Common Political LanguageParty schools provide theory education, Party-discipline training, policy interpretation, and cadre networking.
- Party-State Political Economy: Why Resources Serve Political SecurityFinance, land, industry, and corporate governance operate inside a system shaped by cadre incentives, political security, and development targets.
- Patriotic Education: Binding State, Nation, and PartyPatriotic education often places national community, historical memory, and Party leadership in one narrative.
- The Patriotic Education Law: A Unified Legal Framework for Political EducationThe law assigns patriotic-education duties to schools, families, media, cultural venues, and online platforms.
- Loyalty Purges: How Anti-Corruption Reorders Military PowerMilitary anti-corruption addresses real corruption while affecting promotion networks, procurement ties, factional security, and top-leader authority.
- PLA Mobilization During Covid: Medical Support and Political DisplayPLA medical support had real public-health functions and was also used in narratives of organizational efficiency and institutional superiority.
- The CMC Political Work Department: Loyalty, Personnel, and Ideological ControlThe political-work system connects personnel, Party organization, propaganda education, and loyalty to military command.
- Platform-Economy Rectification: From Permission to Expand to Political CompliancePlatform firms faced simultaneous shifts in antitrust, data security, content responsibility, and labor governance.
- From Central Command To Grassroots PressureHow a political requirement moves through local targets, grassroots tasks, and relational pressure before reaching ordinary people.
- Timeline of Party-State Political Economy: From Planning to Centralized Financial LeadershipA timeline of planning, reform, state-asset supervision, land finance, platform growth, and centralized financial leadership.
- How Party Inspection Becomes a Political Information SystemHow inspection authorization, interviews, lead transfers, and rectification reviews centralize political information.
- The Propaganda Machine: Attention and Emotion ControlA rewritten overview of the CCP propaganda system, from central media to platforms and pseudo-dissent.
- Timeline of Propaganda and Public-Opinion ControlA timeline of propaganda departments, Party media, cultural censorship, internet governance, Qinglang campaigns, and algorithmic distribution.
- The Three Red Lines: How Deleveraging Became Systemic RiskProperty financing limits sought to reduce leverage but collided with presales, local land revenue, and household wealth.
- Red Guards, Rebel Organizations, and Political AuthorizationAnalyzing how signals from the top bypassed regular organization and activated youth and mass factions.
- Regulatory Campaigns and Policy Uncertainty for Private CapitalSeparating ordinary regulation, concentrated rectification, political framing, and local escalation.
- Revolutionary Committees, Military Support, and State ReconstructionTracing how the military and revolutionary committees restored organizational control after mass power seizures.
- China's Position on the Russia-Ukraine WarChina uses the language of sovereignty, ceasefire, anti-sanctions, and security concerns; actual policy must be checked through trade, diplomacy, and military ties.
- Sanctions and Countermeasures: National Security in Cross-Border BusinessCounter-sanctions, export controls, entity lists, and data rules turn diplomatic conflict into corporate compliance risk.
- How Selective Anti-Corruption Reduces Risk for the Political CenterHow case selection can combine governance, deterrence, and political reordering when corruption is widespread and enforcement is finite.
- SOE Bailouts and Mixed Ownership: Why Risk Does Not Exit EquallySOE credit often carries expectations of government support, affecting private financing and the order of market exit.
- The South China Sea ArbitrationThe arbitration award, maritime enforcement, military construction, and historical-rights narratives continue to conflict.
- Maritime Militia in the South China Sea: Blurring Actors in the Gray ZoneOverlap among fishing vessels, local subsidies, coast guard, and naval activity creates ambiguity and deniability.
- The State Council Under Party LeadershipThe State Council manages national administration while major direction, personnel, and cross-agency coordination remain under centralized Party leadership.
- Timeline of Party-State Institutions and LawA timeline of constitutional change, administration, the political-legal system, supervision, and institutional reform.
- The Taiwan Affairs System: Party, State, Military, and United-Front RolesThe Party center sets Taiwan policy while state, military, diplomatic, propaganda, and united-front bodies use different instruments.
- Taiwan Strait Exercises: Military Training as Political CoercionExercises around Taiwan serve training, deterrence, domestic mobilization, international signaling, and normalization of operations.
- Textbooks and Memory Selection: Compressing History Into Testable ConclusionsTextbooks shape historical understanding through space, causation, character judgment, and examination priorities.
- The Five Theater Commands: Reorganizing Joint Operational CommandThe theater-command reform separates service force-building from joint operational command and organizes readiness by strategic direction.
- The 1989 Movement and Military Crackdown: An OverviewIntegrating student, worker, and citizen mobilization, leadership conflict, martial law, lethal force, and aftermath.
- 1989 Timeline: Mourning, Hunger Strike, Martial Law, and the June CrackdownOrdering verifiable milestones from April 15 through the subsequent trials.
- Deaths, Injuries, and Arrests in 1989: Evidence LimitsComparing hospital, government, diplomatic, human-rights, and victim-list evidence.
- Martial-Law Decisions, Troop Mobilization, and the Chain into BeijingSeparating political decision, martial-law command, unit orders, and street encounters.
- After the Crackdown: Trials, Political Rectification, and June Fourth Memory ControlTracing arrests, sentences, workplace screening, education, propaganda, and commemorative restrictions.
- Students, Workers, Citizens, and Internal Differences in the 1989 MovementComparing demands, organization, class language, and views of negotiation.
- Ideological Responsibility in UniversitiesUniversity Party committees, department leaders, faculty evaluation, and event approval shape research and teaching boundaries.
- Veteran Protests: When Military Identity Becomes a Stability TargetVeteran welfare claims touch military honor, local finance, organizational capacity, and social stability.
- Wartime Information Mobilization: Propaganda, Censorship, and Social OrganizationWar mobilization involves military information, public emotion, rumor control, platforms, and social resources.
- The WHO and Pandemic DiplomacyEarly information, WHO interaction, medical aid, and origin disputes jointly shaped China's international standing.
- Wolf-Warrior Diplomacy: Signaling to Domestic and Foreign AudiencesAssertive diplomatic language can deter external actors and demonstrate loyalty or nationalism at home.
- Zero Covid and Supply Chains: When Political Assignments Override OperationsLockdowns, closed-loop production, and travel restrictions subordinated business costs to local epidemic targets and accountability.
Cases
29- The Ant Group IPO Suspension: Financial Innovation Meets Political BoundariesThe suspended listing and later restructuring show how platform finance, data, regulatory authority, and entrepreneur risk can be rapidly reordered.
- The Bo Xilai Case: Corruption Judgment and Elite ReorderingSeparating the judgment, discipline process, Chongqing network, and political consequences.
- Belt and Road Debt RestructuringDebt problems in major projects involve borrower choices, policy banks, contractors, exchange rates, and domestic politics.
- Communal Canteens and Procurement: How Household Exit Options DisappearedAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Communal Canteens and Procurement: How Household Exit Options Disappeared.
- Covid Heroic Narratives: Reordering Suffering, Sacrifice, and ResponsibilityHeroic narratives can record real labor while moving institutional failure out of public debate.
- Cultural Revolution Memory: Rehabilitation, Publishing, and Limited Public DiscussionAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Cultural Revolution Memory: Rehabilitation, Publishing, and Limited Public Discussion.
- Red August School Violence: Political Identity in Everyday PersecutionAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Red August School Violence: Political Identity in Everyday Persecution.
- The Qinglang Campaign Against Fan CultureFan-culture governance linked minors, capital, platform traffic, celebrity morality, and organized mobilization.
- Guangxi during the Cultural Revolution: Factional War, Collective Killing, and RedressAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Guangxi during the Cultural Revolution: Factional War, Collective Killing, and Redress.
- The Hong Kong Garrison and Symbolic DeterrenceThe presence of the garrison, public exercises, and official statements can change political risk without direct street deployment.
- Hong Kong National Education: Why Curriculum Became an Institutional ConflictThe controversy joined curriculum, school autonomy, social mobilization, and central identity politics.
- Arrests and Trials after the Crackdown: Students, Workers, and SentencingAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Arrests and Trials after the Crackdown: Students, Workers, and Sentencing.
- Martial-Law Troops Enter Beijing: Orders, Routes, and Lethal ForceAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of Martial-Law Troops Enter Beijing: Orders, Routes, and Lethal Force.
- June Fourth Memory Control: Families, Commemoration, Textbooks, and SearchAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of June Fourth Memory Control: Families, Commemoration, Textbooks, and Search.
- Lithuania and the Taiwan Representative OfficeThe naming dispute was followed by diplomatic downgrading and trade pressure, showing how Taiwan policy can enter supply-chain risk.
- Military Anti-Corruption: Purges in the Rocket Force and Equipment SystemPersonnel upheaval in the Rocket Force and equipment system joins procurement corruption, readiness credibility, and top-level control.
- The Patriotic Education Law: A Unified Legal Framework for Political EducationThe law assigns patriotic-education duties to schools, families, media, cultural venues, and online platforms.
- PLA Mobilization During Covid: Medical Support and Political DisplayPLA medical support had real public-health functions and was also used in narratives of organizational efficiency and institutional superiority.
- Platform-Economy Rectification: From Permission to Expand to Political CompliancePlatform firms faced simultaneous shifts in antitrust, data security, content responsibility, and labor governance.
- From Central Command To Grassroots PressureHow a political requirement moves through local targets, grassroots tasks, and relational pressure before reaching ordinary people.
- China's Position on the Russia-Ukraine WarChina uses the language of sovereignty, ceasefire, anti-sanctions, and security concerns; actual policy must be checked through trade, diplomacy, and military ties.
- The South China Sea ArbitrationThe arbitration award, maritime enforcement, military construction, and historical-rights narratives continue to conflict.
- Maritime Militia in the South China Sea: Blurring Actors in the Gray ZoneOverlap among fishing vessels, local subsidies, coast guard, and naval activity creates ambiguity and deniability.
- The Sun Zhengcai Case: Succession Expectations, Sudden Removal, and Loyalty ReorderingElite risk control through personnel action, discipline characterization, and later conviction.
- Taiwan Strait Exercises: Military Training as Political CoercionExercises around Taiwan serve training, deterrence, domestic mobilization, international signaling, and normalization of operations.
- Veteran Protests: When Military Identity Becomes a Stability TargetVeteran welfare claims touch military honor, local finance, organizational capacity, and social stability.
- The WHO and Pandemic DiplomacyEarly information, WHO interaction, medical aid, and origin disputes jointly shaped China's international standing.
- The Xinyang Famine: Procurement, Violence, and Later InvestigationAn event-timeline and evidence-status reconstruction of The Xinyang Famine: Procurement, Violence, and Later Investigation.
- Zero Covid and Supply Chains: When Political Assignments Override OperationsLockdowns, closed-loop production, and travel restrictions subordinated business costs to local epidemic targets and accountability.