Using religion to resist rural dispossession: a case study of a Hui Muslim community in north-west China

In this paper, we examine the role played by religion in a struggle waged by Hui Muslim villagers against land expropriation. Religion can provide powerful resources for protest movements, especially for religious minorities, but it can also be dangerous. This is particularly true in China where the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The China quarterly
Main Author: Luo, Qiangqiang (Author)
Contributors: Andreas, Joel (Other)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge Univ. Press 2016
In: The China quarterly
Further subjects:B Religion
B Political mobilization
B Protest movements
B Population group
B Ethnic group
B Muslim
B Factors of production
B Conflict
B State
B China
B Soil
B Resources
B Hui
B Real estate
Description
Summary:In this paper, we examine the role played by religion in a struggle waged by Hui Muslim villagers against land expropriation. Religion can provide powerful resources for protest movements, especially for religious minorities, but it can also be dangerous. This is particularly true in China where the state has had little toleration of autonomous organization and has long been suspicious of religious organization, especially among ethnic minorities. Scholarly literature about collective action by religious minorities in China has focused on protests about cultural and political issues - and the repression of such protests - but there has been relatively little scholarship about protests by religious minorities over economic issues. The number of protests over economic conflicts has increased in recent years, and the state has been more tolerant of economic than of political protests. These conditions have shaped the following questions: what happens when villagers employ religious ideas and use religious organization to advance economic demands? How effective are religious ideas and organization as tools of mobilization? How do government authorities respond? (China Q/GIGA)
ISSN:0305-7410
Contains:In: The China quarterly