| Local environmental governance innovation in China: staging 'triangular dialogues' for industrial air pollution control |
9 |
| Governance models and policy framework: some Chinese perspectives |
9 |
| Party-state, nation, empire: rethinking the grammar of Chinese Governance |
7 |
| Governing by the Internet: local governance in the digital age |
6 |
| From outsiders to insiders: the rise of China ENGOs as new experts in the law-making process and the building of a technocratic representation |
5 |
| The rise of public-private partnerships in China |
5 |
| Structure hypothesis of authoritarian rule: evidence from the lifespans of China's dynasties |
5 |
| An assessment of China's ability to regulate its iron and steel industries |
4 |
| Embracing complexity: a framework for exploring governance resources |
4 |
| E-representation: the case of blogging people's Congress deputies in China |
4 |
| Crossing the river by feeling for the stones: contesting models of marketization and the development of China's long-term care services |
3 |
| Top-down place-based competition and award: local government incentives for non-GDP improvement in China |
3 |
| Stability by change - the changing public-private mix in social welfare provision in China and the Netherlands |
3 |
| Top-level design, reform pressures, and local adaptations: an interpretation of the trajectory of reform since the 18th CPC Party Congress |
2 |
| 'Know Who' may be better than 'Know How': political connections and reactions in administrative disputes in China |
2 |
| Coping with growth in China: comparing models of development in Guangdong and Chongqing |
2 |
| The top-level design of social health insurance reforms in China: towards universal coverage, improved benefit design, and smart payment methods |
2 |
| Representation, legitimacy, and innovation |
2 |
| Crisis and mutation in the institutions of representation in 'real-existing' democracies |
2 |
| Representation in a context across political orders and the Chinese case |
2 |
| Remaking the loyal cadres: the Ideological Responsibility System in China's new era |
1 |
| 'Market justice' in China and Russia |
1 |
| The international appeal of behavioural public policy: is nudge an Anglo-American phenomenon? |
1 |
| A sleeping giant awakes? The rise of the Institutional Grammar Tool (IGT) in policy research |
1 |
| Family financial support in income security for older parents in Hong Kong and South Korea |
1 |
| Public administration and the erosion of the rule of law in the United States |
1 |
| Defeating or delaying the defaults: bailout strategy of the Chinese government for its state-owned enterprises on their bond payments |
1 |
| Mobilization and irregularity: volatile growth of educational expenditure in China |
1 |
| When courts refuse to play by the rules (of law): the failure of public administration theory in securing constitutional rights |
1 |
| Has democratic governance and the rule of law been compromised by the continued growth of the administrative state? |
0 |
| Strengthening the rule of law in collaborative governance |
0 |
| Politics, law, and administrative discretion: the case of work safety regulation in China |
0 |
| The institutional origin of private entrepreneurs' policy influence in China: an analysis of the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce |
0 |
| Epistemological globalization and the shaping of social policy in China |
0 |
| Contracting out: exporting lessons for Chinese governance |
0 |
| Party and state policy documents and China's economy: some macro-level empirical evidence |
0 |
| The psychology of local officials: explaining strategic behavior in the Chinese Target Responsibility System |
0 |
| Informational inclusion: reflection work in China's local people's political consultative conferences |
0 |
| Three tyrannies of participatory governance |
0 |
| Governing in the shadows |
0 |
| 'Representation' and Daibiao: a comparative study of the notions of political representation in France and China |
0 |
| Australian administrative elites and the challenges of digital-era change |
0 |