MARY GALLAGHER
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Labor in China
BOOKS
Authoritarian Legality in China: Law, Workers, and the
State
,
Cambridge University Press, 2017.
Resources: http://www.cambridge.org/gallagher
From Iron-rice Bowl to Informalization:
Markets, State and Workers in a Changing China
.
Co-editor with Sarosh Kuruvilla and Ching
Kwan Lee. Cornell University Press, 2011.
Contagious Capitalism: Globalization and the Politics of Labor in China
. Princeton University Press, 2005. Also published in Chinese
translation as 全球化与中国劳工政治,Zhejiang People’s Press, 2010.
ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS
“Mobilization without Movement.” With Patricia Chen.
ILR Review
. Forthcoming.
“Moving In and Moving Up: Labor Conditions and China’s Changing Developmental Model.” With Yujeong Yang.
Public Administration
and Development,
August 2017 (37:2), pp. 160-175.
“Getting Schooled: Legal Mobilization as an Educative Experience.”
With Yujeong Yang.
Law and Social Inquiry,
Winter 2017 (42:1), pp.
163-194.
“Transformation without Transition: China’s Maoist Legacies in Comparative Perspective,”
in
Working through the Past: Labor and
Authoritarian Legacies in Comparative Perspective,
Teri Caraway, Stephen Crowley and Maria Cook, eds. Cornell University
Press, 2015.
“China’s 2008 Labor Contract Law: Implementation and Implications for China’s Workers,”
with John Giles, Albert Park, and Meiyan
Wang. In
Human Relations
, 68(2), 197-236, 2015.
“China’s Labor Movement and the End of the Rapid Growth Era,”
Daedalus
, May 2014.
“Urban Social Insurance Provision: Regional and Ownership Variations,”
with Juan Chen. In
Chinese Social Policy in Transition
, Douglas
Besharov and Karen Baehler, eds
.
Oxford University Press, 2013.
“Changes in the World’s Workshop: The Demographic, Social, and Political Factors Behind China’s Labor Movement.” In
Dragon vs.
Eagle: The Chinese Economy and US-China Relations
, Wei-Chiao Chung and Huizhong Zhou, editors. W.E. Upjohn Institute for
Employment Research, 2012.
“Legislating Harmony: Labor Law Reform in Contemporary China,” with Dong Baohua. In
From Iron-Rice Bowl to Informalization:
Markets, State and Workers in a Changing China.
Co-editor with Sarosh Kuruvilla and Ching Kwan Lee. Cornell University Press,
2011.
“China’s Older Workers: Between Law and Policy, Between Laid Off and Unemployed.”
Laid Off and Unemployed Workers in China
,
Tom Gold, ed. Palgrave/MacMillan Press, 2009.
"Hope for Protection and Hopeless Choices: Labor Legal Aid in China.” In
Grassroots Political Reform in China
, Merle Goldman and
Elizabeth J. Perry, eds. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007), pp. 196-227.
“Mobilizing the Law in China: ‘Informed Disenchantment’ and the Development of Legal Consciousness,”
Law and Society Review
,
December 2006, pp. 783-816.
“Use the Law as Your Weapon!’ Institutional Change and Legal Mobilization in China,” in
Engaging Chinese Law
, Neil Diamant, Stanley
Lubman, Kevin O’Brien, eds. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2005, pp. 54-83.
“Introduction: The State of Labor in the People’s Republic of China,”
Studies in Comparative International Development
39:2
(Summer 2004), pp. 3-10
“Time is Money, Efficiency is Life: The Transformation of Labor Relations in China,”
Studies in Comparative International Development
(
Summer 2004), 11-44.
“Reform and Openness,”
in
Essential Readings in Comparative Politics
, Patrick O’Neil and Ronald Rogowski, eds. W.W. Norton Press,
2004. This is an abbreviated version of the
World Politics
article.
Chinese Politics
BOOKS
Contemporary Chinese Politics: New Sources, Methods, and Field Strategies
. Co-editor with Allen Carlson, Melanie Manion, Kenneth
Lieberthal. Cambridge University Press, 2010. Also published in Chinese translation as 当代中国政治研究, Chinese Academy of
Social Science Publishing House, 2014.
Chinese Justice: Civil Dispute Resolution in Contemporary China
. Co-editor with Margaret Woo. Cambridge University Press, 2011.
ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS
“The Social Relations of China’s State Capitalism,” in
Regulating the Visible Hand? The Institutional Implications of Chinese State
Capitalism,
Benjamin Liebman and Curtis Milhaupt, eds. Oxford University Press, 2016.
“The Rise of Civil Society.” A comment on Wang Ming. In
China’s Political Development: Chinese and American Perspectives
, Kenneth
Lieberthal, Cheng Li, and Yu Keping, editors. Brookings Institution, 2014. Published first in Chinese as 中国治理评论, 2012.
“Remote Control: How the Media Sustains Authoritarian Rule in China,” with Daniela Stockmann.
Comparative Political Studies
, April
2011.
“Users and Non-Users: Legal Experience and its Effect on Legal Consciousness,” with Yuhua Wang. In
Chinese Justice
. Co-editor with
Margaret Woo. Cambridge University Press, 2011.
“The Limits of Civil Society in a Late Leninist State,” in
Civil Society and Political Change in Asia
, Muthiah Alagappa, ed. Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 2005, pp. 419-454.
“China in 2004: Stability Above All,”
Asian Survey
45:1 (January 2005): 21-32.
“Reform and Openness: Why Chinese Economic Reforms Have Delayed Democracy,”
World Politics
. (April 2002), pp. 338-372.
Authoritarianism
“The Selectorate Theory for Autocracies,”
with Jonathan K. Hanson, Syracuse University.
Annual Review of Political Science
, 2015.
18:23.
“Power Tool or Dull Blade? Resilient Autocracy and the Selectorate Theory,”
with Jonathan K. Hanson, Syracuse University). In
Why
Communism Did Not Collapse: Understanding Authoritarian Resilience in Asia and Europe
, Martin Dimitrov, editor. Cambridge
University Press, 2013.
“Coalitions, Carrots, and Sticks: Economic Inequality and Authoritarian States,” with Jonathan K. Hanson.
PS: Political Science &
Politics
, Volume 42, Issue 04, October 2009, pp 667-672.
Miscellaneous
“Meaning and Measurement: Uses of and Strategies for Effective Interviewing in Political Science Research.” In
Interview Research in
Political Science
, Layna Mosley, editor. Cornell University Press, 2013.
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