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    A New Interpretation of Lenin's What Is To Be Done?: From the Perspective of Comparative Historical Sociology
    YING Xing
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (5): 56-86.  
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    Based on the perspective of comparative historical sociology and organizational sociology, this paper provides a new interpretation of Lenin's classic work on party building theory What Is To Be Done? by comparing the Russian Social Democratic Workers' Party with the Russian revolutionary populists, and the Second International social democrats with the Chinese Communist Party. The paper first outlines the intellectual and political background of What Is To Be Done?, and then analyzes the similarities and differences of the "indoctrination" mechanism in Europe, Russia, and China, especially emphasizing the difference between "propaganda", "agitation", and "appeal". The discussion continues with a focus on three core organizational issues discussed in chapter four of What Is To Be Done? Through comparison with Weber's analysis of professional politicians, the paper explains Lenin's understanding of the importance of the organisation of professional revolutionaries, especially distinguishing the two meanings of "making revolution a profession". Through comparison with the CCP's work in the white areas, the author highlights the significance of Lenin's proposal to combine a solid organizational core with differentiated organizational circles, illustrated in a diagram outlining the differentiated organizational chart of the Russian Social Democratic Workers' Party. Through comparison with the Russian revolutionary populists and the Second International, the paper shows the origin and evolution of Lenin's thoughts on the conspiratorial and centralized nature of party organizations, with a focus on the connection between Lenin and Peter Tkachev on this idea. The author also analyzes the relationship between local and central authorities discussed by Lenin in his book. The author finally proposes some directions for further comparative extension, and points out the significance of moving from technical analysis to root cause political analysis in organization research in Chinese sociology.
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    Cohort and Gender Disparities in Childbearing Motivation: Evidence from the China Family Panel Studies in 2020
    SHENG He, LI Jianxin
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (3): 187-212.  
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    The current low fertility rate in China has become a recognized fact, and the change in childbearing attitude is one of the key reasons. Childbearing motivation is an important component of childbearing attitude and is at the forefront of the sequence from childbearing attitude to behavior. This article examines cohort and gender differences in childbearing motivation by asking respondents why they should have children. Based on data from the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS) in 2020, this study uses cluster analysis to classify people's childbearing motivation into four categories: "low intention and negative", "individual-oriented", "dual-oriented emotional" and "family-oriented". The result shows that more than half of Chinese residents still have family-oriented motivation of childbearing while individual-oriented and dual-oriented emotional motivation account for 23% and 15% respectively. Only 9% of the residents have low intention and negative childbearing motivation. Moreover, there are significant inter-cohort differences in childbearing motivations. Earlier birth cohorts are more likely to have dual-oriented emotional, family-oriented motivations; while younger birth cohorts are more likely to have low intention and negative, individual-oriented motivations. Among the post-80s and post-90s groups, family-oriented motivations of childbearing gradually lose their dominance, while individual-oriented motivations increase significantly. In terms of gender differences, men's childbearing motivations are more traditional than women's, and the extent of inter-cohort change is smaller for men. The differences in childbearing motivation between men and women tend to widen among later generations. The study suggests changes in educational attainment as a possible explanation.
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    Rights and Power: The Law Problem in Foucault's Discourse on Governmentality
    XIAO Ying
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (3): 1-53.  
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    The relationship between rights and power is one of the fundamental issues in Western political thought. An "orthodox consensus" has been reached in Western political theories that state sovereignty and individual rights stipulated by laws or regulations are the legitimate source not only of power practice but also of its goal and boundary. However, in a series of lectures in the College de France, Michel Foucault took governmentality as his main theme and made an in-depth analysis of the relationship between knowledge and power from different perspectives. He showed the intricate historical relationship between rights and power, governance and law, and subverted this "orthodox consensus." By combing through the history of European social governance since the Middle Ages, he demonstrated on the one hand that state sovereignty and individual sovereign rights were formed in specific power mechanisms, and, on the other hand, he emphasized that the formation and change of governance techniques—from police to disciplinary power and then to bio-power—was a process of colonizing rights and laws in different ways. And, because of the collusion of knowledge and power, these colonial mechanisms were all the more concealed by the mask of knowledge. In the face of such an awkward situation, Foucault neither opposed governance, rather opposed excessive governance, nor advocated the return of orthodox individual rights and state sovereignty, but emphasized the construction of "new rights". These "new rights" are "critiques", that is, to reveal how power and knowledge conspire and how reason has become the governing mechanism of man in a specific historical context. In the depth of Foucault's soul flickers the light of positive "nostalgia, " and at its source are the Stoic "self-governance" before and after the AD and the German neo-liberalism governance after the World War Ⅱ.
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    Long-Term Employment Trajectories of Chinese Women after Their First Childbirth: A Sequence Analysis
    YANG Yichun, YU Jia, XIE Yu
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (5): 167-203.  
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    Women's post-maternal employment status is an important factor contributing to gender inequality in labor market. Previous research mainly considered employment as a static and single event, lacking a dynamic life course perspective. Using the 2014 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) data, this study applies sequence analysis for the first time to depict a period of twenty-one years of non-agricultural working women's employment trajectories before and after their first childbirth. We divide the sample born between 1940s to 1970s into different birth cohorts to cover three stages of labor market transformations in China:the early days of the PRC, the early stage of market reform and the mature stage of market reform. Results show six typical trajectories of women's post-maternal employment in China. They are:long-term regular employment (55.06%), early return to employment (8.69%), late return to employment (3.98%), self-employment or from employment to self-employment (19.78%), long-term unemployed (8.07%), and long-term informal employment (4.42%). Different employment trajectories reflect clearly the heterogeneity of female group characteristics. Our results also show that with the social changes, the complexity and diversity of Chinese women's employment trajectories have increased significantly, showing that more women frequently switch between multiple employment status. It can be seen from the trajectories of different cohorts that the proportion of women who are able to maintain full-time employment has significantly decreased, while the proportion of self-employed, part-time and non-employment trajectories have increased noticeably. In addition, human capital, institutional patronage, and shared childcare responsibility have significant positive effect on women's full-time employment. Nevertheless, with China's marketization, the protection provided by these factors have substantially weakened over cohorts.
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    The Limits of Care: An Ethnographic Study of Dementia Care in Nursing Homes
    WU Xinyue
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (3): 162-186.  
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    This ethnographic study offers insights into the lifeworld and multiple experiences of individuals with dementia residing in nursing homes. Firstly, from the perspective of phenomenological sociology, the study delves into the "disruption of experiences" resulting from dementia, which fundamentally alters the existential situation of patients. This disruption manifests as a fracture of self-coherence and a dissociation of intersubjectivity. When entering a nursing home, patients are further detached from their previous social relationships and world of meaning. Secondly, the article explores how specific ensembles of knowledge and practice in nursing homes shape the dementia experience. Under the current care management system with ADL as its core classification framework, the operational significance of dementia as a category is to a large extent dismantled. However, the stigmatizing label "laonian chidai" (senile dementia) often appears in the daily symbolic interaction process, causing all kinds of discrimination and conflicts. The dilemma of cognitive impairment classification of nursing homes reveals the dialectic relationship between "normal" and "abnormal" in definition and operation. This in turn affects the personhood and living situation of people with dementia. Finally, this article focuses on the daily ethics of dementia care, selecting two typical care scenarios of demand response and physical restraint, to examine how caregivers respond to daily crises and adopt expedient practices. The study suggests that the special care relationship of dementia care provides us with a new perspective on personhood and intersubjectivity.
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    A Discussion on "Digital Society and Its Governance in Contemporary China"
    Zeqi QIU, Jun LI, Jinglin XIANG, Anning HU
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2025, 45 (3): 1-53.  
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    For Whom Do Views Change: The Influence of Child Gender on Parents' Recognition of Filial Piety
    Jiaqing YU, Anning HU, Sen XUE
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2025, 45 (1): 203-223.  
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    While research on filial piety often emphasizes the unidirectional relationship from children to parents, intergenerational ties are inherently bidirectional. Changes in parental recognition of filial piety ethics not only illuminate their role expectations of their children but also serves as an important entry point for understanding the overall changes in traditional Chinese filial piety. This study proposes a family analysis framework that incorporates gender roles to explore the micro-foundation and social context underpinning the transformation of filial piety in China. Drawing on data from the 2014 China Family Panel Studies(CFPS), we leverage the exogenous variation in firstborn gender to identify its causal effects on parental binary filial piety recognition. On average, parents of daughters exhibit weaker endorsement of authoritarian filial piety yet show stronger recognition of reciprocal filial piety compared to parents of sons. This pattern arises from two key mechanisms. First, daughters' post-marital patrilocal residence disrupts traditional intergenerational co-residence arrangements, thereby diminishing parental adherence to authoritarian filial piety norms. Second, adult daughters are more likely to provide caregiving support during their parents'illnesses, fulfilling emotional expectations for affection and fostering greater parental recognition of reciprocal filial piety. Additionally, the declining fertility rates over the past four decades have brought about a significant shift in the gender composition of children, with families only having daughters becoming increasingly more common. Given that parents with only daughters exhibit lower recognition of authoritarian filial piety, this helps explain why there has been a decline in societal recognition of traditional filial piety ethics. By analyzing the changes in parental role expectations and ethical recognition, this study not only sheds light on the mechanisms driving the transformation and development of traditional Chinese culture but also offers a deeper understanding of the reconstruction of family ethics in the context of fertility transition.

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    The Changing Course of Chinese Sense of Social Fairness in the Transitional Period and Its Explanatory Factors
    XU Yanhui, KONG Yizhou
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (3): 213-242.  
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    The perception of social fairness is an individual's overall perception or judgment of the state of social equity. Based on the repeated cross-sectional data of the China General Social Survey from 2010 to 2018, this study provides a holistic analysis of the shifting trends of social fairness perception and their explanatory factors during the two major transition periods of China, namely, the past transition period of reform and opening up and the current transition period of diversified development. With the help of mathematical models such as log-linear models and multilevel age-period-cohort models, the following three major findings are observed. First, in the current transition period, the total social mobility rate and the upward mobility ratio have been rising, and people's perceptions on social equity show a upward trend of volatility; while in the historical transition period, with the establishment and continuous improvement of markets, the perceptions of fairness experienced a rapid decline, and then a rapid improvement. Second, the three factors of social structure, social psychology and cultural norms are neither mutually exclusive nor competitive in the changing process of social equity perceptions, but are intertwined and function in different ways. Among them, social structural factors such as intergenerational mobility are foundational to the changes in the perception of social equity, while subjective class mobility perceptions are the direct source of people's perceptions and cultural norms constitute a stable potential factor. Third, this study examines the status of social equity from the perspective of social stratification and mobility, and takes the occurrence of intergenerational mobility, and its direction and distance as key indicators to measure the objective equity status. It is found that social equity status and the sense of fairness are linked, but the moral concept on which the perception of fairness is based has changed with the transformation of society in specific historical periods. This study extends the research on social equity perceptions to the macro-process and dynamic analysis of social structural transformation and people's mentality transformation. It overcomes the relatively crude measurement of intergenerational mobility distance as well as the treatment of social equity perceptions as a static factor in previous studies. In this regard, it offers an important direction for future research to investigate deeper into the tension between subjective and objective equity and explore a new model of social stratification.
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    A Discussion on "People-centeredness is an Essential Characteristic of the Practice of Chinese-style Modernization"
    Feizhou ZHOU, Jun WEN, Xuejing CHEN, Tianfu WANG, Li ZHENG
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2025, 45 (1): 1-56.  
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    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (5): 235-240.  
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    What is Mingfen? A Study of Status Based on Indigenous Perspective
    ZHAI Xuewei
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2024, 44 (6): 1-30.  
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    In modern social science research, a indigenous concept is often replaced by modern disciplinary concepts, making it difficult to bring its meaning and its research framework to light. Mingfen is a concept that has been replaced by hierarchy, role, identity, and norms of behavior, so much so that the academic interpretation of the concept remains shallow. Compared to these conceptual combinations, the meaning of Mingfen needs to be understood within its own conceptual combination. This paper therefore argues that in this regard Mingfen is the operationalization of ritual and etiquette, and that its purpose is to establish a matching hierarchy of superiority and inferiority in real vertical relationships in order to maintain daily order. Examining roles or identities, their commonality is based on “self-identity”, while the operation of Mingfen requires establishing “field-identity” in political and social context and reality. What is meant by “field-identity” is that social members can regard the power relationships and interactive situations in different fields as a unified whole, so that different identities and roles can be comprehensively ranked in this system. This is possible because Li (ritual) has a holistic cognitive aspect, and the hierarchical ordering of its ranks is provided by the ideal of Tian Di Jun Qin Shi(Heaven, Earth, Monarch, Parents, and Teacher). The emergence of “field-identity” leads individuals to form a cognitive panorama of power relationships in the whole interactions due to their simultaneous confrontation with multiple roles. It enables an individual to clearly understand their own course of action and the appropriateness of their behavior on the one hand, and on the other hand to have a comprehensive understanding of the hierarchy of every individual, thereby leading their words and deeds to be less self-centered and more dependent on their status sequence and power. This interconnected pattern, although it achieves the expected order, stability, and harmony, also constitutes various potential power struggles in the field-identity.
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    Post-Materialistic Values and Political Participation of Chinese Residents: Based on the Analysis of Generational Differences
    CHI Shangxin, SHI Yaodong, HUANG Jizhao
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (5): 204-234.  
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    Previous studies have shown that post-materialistic values have an important impact on public political participation of the public in Western countries, but there is a lack of research on its role on public political participation in China. Based on Chinese data from the World Values Survey(WVS2018), this paper investigates the impact of post-materialistic values on Chinese residents' political participation from the perspective of generational differences. The selected measurement options of post-materialistic values are assigned different weights and aggregated according to the priority order of goals. Political participation is operationalized into three main types:intra-system, extra-institutional, and online political participation. The generational differences are divided into four generational cohorts:initial construction, reform and opening-up, marketization, and the new century. The study found that:firstly, the score of the current post-materialistic values of Chinese residents is generally not high, but there is a clear generational difference-significantly higher for those who grew up after the reform and opening up, as well as an increasing trend as the generations move forward. Secondly, the generational effect of political participation varies in different aspects. The generations growing up after the reform and opening-up show a generational increasing trend in the political participation outside the system and online, but it is opposite in grassroots elections. Thirdly, post-materialistic values have no significant impact on grassroots election participation but have a significant contributing effect on online political participation and extra-institutional participation which shows an increasing trend with each generation. These findings hold true after robustness testing. Therefore, the study confirms that the changes in public values brought about by social development can be used as cultural variables to explain the extra-institutional and online political participation of contemporary Chinese residents. It also suggests that more attention should be paid to the younger generation in the guidance of values and orderly political participation of citizens.
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    Wufu and Sandai: Gender and Family Name in the Light of Changes of Marriage Prohibition in China's Marriage Laws
    ZHAO Xiaoli
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (5): 87-111.  
    Abstract1406)   HTML64)    PDF(pc) (2257KB)(815)       Save
    Since the late Qing Dynasty, the scope of prohibited marriage in China's marriage law has undergone a change from wufu (five grades of mourning) to sandai(three generations). Since the Zhou Dynasty, traditional Chinese society had adhered to the Zhou etiquette of "no marriage between members of the same clan". Marriage between cousins(except paternal parallel cousins) had been left to the discretion of the family and not prohibited by law. In 1930, in accordance with the principle of equality between men and women, the kinship section of the Republic of China Civil Code changed the classification of traditional Chinese kinships of internal relatives and extermal relatives to Western-style blood relatives and in-laws, thus introduced a problem of whether or not clan members outside of the wufu circle and cousins within three generations could marry each other. This paper points out these contradictions and conflicts by examining the contradiction between the principle of freedom of marriage under the 1950 Marriage Law and the common practice of "no marriage between members of the same clan", and the conflict between eugenic policy and freedom of marriage in the 1980 Marriage Law. The root of these contradictions is the fact that Chinese kinship and Western kingship classifications are incompatible. Chinese kinship categorization is based on the social "clan surnames" system rather than the biological "sex" system, and the traditional social practice of no marriage within the same clan and marriage between cousins (except paternal parallel cousins) is due to the kinship system's emphasis on internal relations over external ones rather than on male over female preference. Nowadays, with the abolition of change of surnames for women after marriage, the traditionally external (e.g. maternal) relatives can now be regarded as internal relatives, the "no marriage within the same clan" can be applied to both clans. The eugenic reason for prohibiting marriage of collateral relatives within three generations and the etiquette reason for the no-marriage within the same clans can go hand in hand now because eugenics serves the continuation of the clan.
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    The Psychological Construction of “Stability”: A Historical Narrative of the Collective Identity and Mobility Trend of Middle-aged and Elderly Teachers in Rural Areas
    LI Caihong, ZHU Zhiyong
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (5): 139-166.  
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    This paper takes Wu Primary School, a former state-owned farm school in eastern Inner Mon golia, as a case study to explore the mobility trend of rural middle-aged and elderly teachers, its characteristics and causes during the time of rapid urbanization. The study attempts to gain a deep understanding of the life choices of this generation of teachers under multiple situations from the perspective of historical changes and regional development. The study found that after many years of hardship, middle-aged and elderly teachers on state-owned farms had derived a collective identity that included three elements:survival security identity, emotional identity and attachment, and professional efficacy and self-identity. This triadic identity was based on the cross-construction of institutional identity, legal identity, and professional identity, emerged in the historical process of market reform of farming, farming units, and education system of state-owned farms. Such a collective identity reflected the value tendency and emotional belonging of members in a close social community, with collective status as the carrier, integrating collective interest, consciousness and emotional connection. In the end, in a paradoxical way the triadic collective identity promoted the construction of a psychological mechanism with "stability" as the core for this group of middle-aged and elderly teachers, forming a collective preference of remaining in the countryside and characteristics of attachment, and therefore revealing another side of abnormality that has received little attention in the field of rural teacher mobility. With the ongoing urbanisation in China, this"stable" psychological mechanism has great significance in promoting and improving the professional development of rural teachers and the quality of rural education.
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    Fluid Boundaries of Responsibility: The Business and Politics of Grassroots Government
    PAN Tong
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (3): 135-161.  
    Abstract1665)   HTML67)    PDF(pc) (2894KB)(749)       Save
    This article takes an "abnormal petition" incident as a case study to explore the changes in the responsibility boundary of grassroots governments and the emergence of relevant action strategies. The research finds that grassroots governments have a dual role orientation of "business department" and "political unit", and their respective behavioral logics are also different. The former suits for a rational bureaucracy, and its design of clear task boundaries causes the ambiguity of the responsibility boundaries of grassroots governments in practice, leaving institutional space for their risk avoidance strategies. The latter applies to the political integration, and its blurred task boundary design in fact forces grassroots governments to re-clarify their responsibility boundaries and enforce their sense of responsibility. Affected by the logic of the two systems, the responsibility boundary of grassroots governments exhibits the characteristic of "fluidity", and governments' behaviors have also shifted from "risk avoidance" to "risk taking". Rational bureaucracy and political integration determine the dual role orientation of "business-politics" of grassroots governments, which in turn affects the fluidity of the responsibility boundary. Therefore, changes of events in the governance context become the trigger mechanism. In this case study, the incident was initially just a homestead dispute. However, according to the logic of rational bureaucracy, the local government avoided the responsibility to resolve the dispute by diverting the case to the Bureau of Justice and the Bureau of Health. When the petitioner's appeal to the Bureaus failed, her journey of petitioning began. Since the incident has now transformed from an administrative incident to a petition case, the responsibility boundary of the local government has changed, and the political integration system began to play a major role. As a result, the local government takes on the responsibility of dealing with petition cases using tactics of appeasement, strict pressure, and downward responsibility transfer. This article constructed the phrase of "fluid responsibility boundary" and used it as an analytical framework, emphasizing the dual roles of grassroots governments and situational change in shaping their behavior. The study contributes to the dialogues and development of research on grassroots government responsibility.
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    "Living a Normal Life": HIV Antiretroviral Therapy and the Construction of Daily Life of Infected People
    Zeyu HUANG, Yingying HUANG
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2025, 45 (1): 57-88.  
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    From the perspective of medical anthropology and based on interviews and observations of people living with HIV (PLWH), this article uses "normal" as a core concept to explore how antiretroviral therapy (ART) is involved in the construction of the daily lives of PLWH through the creation of "normalcy", and how these people cope with a standardized "normal life" through their own life practices. In this process, the HIV governance system considers the creation of a "normal body" that conforms to medical standards as its primary goal to ensure the overall safety of society with ART as a normalizing and transforming means for infected people. To this end, the governance system utilizes ethics and law to frame the acceptance of ART as the responsibility and obligation of PLWH that will lead them to a "normal future". This has made accepting ART a spontaneous choice for the infected individuals. However, when the "normality" envisioned by people living with HIV clashes with what the governance system seeks to impose, various difficulties arose in their lives. The governance system sees these aberrations as a necessary path to "normalcy", thus the infected person must endure them in order to "live a normal life". PLWH must have wondered what "normal life" is for, but in order to continue their treatment, they must construct a version of "normal life" that differs from the norm, or even deviates from it according to the logic of their own life, which is inevitably full of the traces of medicine and technology.

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    “Pricing” Injuries: Practice of Commensuration in Medical Injury Disputes
    ZHANG Long
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (5): 112-138.  
    Abstract622)   HTML56)    PDF(pc) (2794KB)(703)       Save
    Existing studies on medical injury compensation often focus on institutional arrangement or financial outcomes. They are lack of sufficient attention to the micro-social processes that determine compensations, especially the tension between the different kinds of losses and the quantitative outcomes of resolution. Based on the fieldwork in a dispute resolution department of a public city hospital in northern China, this study presents the comprehensive medical injury compensation "pricing" processes under different channels. The paper argues that the crucial parts in medical injury disputes inevitably involve commensuration, a social process by which different factors are being quantified onto the same scale. By introducing the concept of commensurative practice, this study depicts the formation of compensation amounts as an accumulative process of multiple micro-based commensurative practices. The study finds that the commensurative practices in medical injury disputes are usually unfolded in three dimensions:value (integration of values), cognitive (simplification of information) and technical (accuracy of measurement). There are two factors affecting specific ways of commensuration that can cause dimensional shifts. On one hand, the less institutionalized the interaction context, the more prominent the value dimension in the commensurative practice, while the more institutionalized interaction context most likely results in more cognitive and technical commensuraition. On the other hand, the more directly commensurative practices target the "incommensurable" or "not easily commensurable" attributes, the more prominent the dimension of value commensuration, while the attributes of what is considered "commensurable" or "easily commensurable" are more often accompanied by cognitive and technical commensuration. The main focus of this study is to present as well as compare commensurative practices of "incommensurables" under the channels of different institutionalisation.
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    The Making of Consent to Produce AI: Labour Organisation Forms and Control Mechanisms in Data Annotating Industry
    Hui HUANG
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2025, 45 (2): 1-31.  
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    The rapid proliferation of generative AI models has sparked critical inquiry into the hidden precarious labour infrastructures that help sustaining their performance. This article draws on ethnographic research conducted in three Chinese AI companies to examine how the production of large-scale models is made possible through intensive, low-paid and precarious data work. It argues that AI production is underpinned by a project-based labour regime structured with insourcing, outsourcing and crowdsourcing as its main organizational forms. The regime has systematically weakened the autonomy of labor, exacerbated the instability of labor, and presented significant characteristics of labor alienation. Rather than overt resistance, workers tend to display consent and acceptance of precarious conditions. In order to conceal the essence of its labor exploitation, capital employs three main strategies of normative control to exert hegemonic power over labor in order to create "willingness" on the part of labor. This study explores how such consent is being actively produced. Gamification mechanisms reframe exploitative work as cognitively stimulating and competitive; task modularisation and fast-changing project cycles lead to cyclical deskilling, curbing worker leverage and occupational mobility; and the symbolic valorisation of AI work fosters a sense of meaning and belonging in otherwise marginal roles. These mechanisms operate as technologies of consent, embedding hegemonic control within the everyday organisation of AI labour. This paper uncovers the paradoxical reality in contemporary AI production: how capital manufactures consent to "make human work like machines so that machines can appear more human". The findings extend classic labour process theory and contribute to a deeper understanding of labour organisation and control mechanisms in the age of artificial intelligence.

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    Degenerate Agon: Reflections on Civilization in Huizinga's Theory of Play
    Wan SU
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2025, 45 (2): 124-150.  
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    Huizinga's theory of play is often regarded as an imperfect foundational work of modern ludology due to its perceived excessive emphasis on Agon (competition). However, revisiting Huizinga's theoretical framework and historical context reveals that his theory of play is fundamentally a social theory addressing how humans coexist amidst competition, rather than strictly a cultural theory aimed at defining play itself. Between the two World Wars, in the face of cultural decay in social life and the intensifying hostile political competition, Huizinga drew upon Plato, Schiller, and Burckhardt, as well as incorporated the philosophy of reciprocity of the Annales school's anthropology into his elaboration of the "Homo Ludens" concept. Huizinga expanded the non-utilitarian value of play in human civilization from individual aesthetic education to the level of group coexistence, presenting it as a messianic proposal to reclaim classical humanistic traditions and the ideal of peace. Huizinga conceived of play as a beneficial competitive state crucial to civilizational development. Within a broad comparative civilizational perspective, the competitions, contests, and rituals, typically depicted by classical anthropology as occurring between opposing groups, were seen to create universal cultural institutions, such as law, poetry, and myth. These institutions possessed cultural regulatory power precisely because they were structured within a framework of play, mitigating tendencies toward fragmentation and antagonism among groups. For Huizinga, a significant cost of modernity was the decline of play within social life, where intense competition for economic or political power has led to an excessive encroachment of the domain of seriousness (Ernst) into the domain of play (Spiel), thus returning society back to its primitive state where only "prey" and "enemies" were visible, most dramatically manifested in the threat of "total war" to human civilization. Huizinga formulated this judgment against the backdrop of pre-World War II Germany's increasingly unlawful diplomatic and military strategies. In contrast to Carl Schmitt, Germany's leading jurist who similarly expressed dissatisfaction with modern civilization through his pessimistic friendenemy distinction theory, Huizinga replaced the assumption of "political man" with that of "playing man", and substituted the figure of the "enemy" with that of the "opponent, " offering humanity an ethically enriched, more optimistic perspective. Facing today's intensifying divisions and competition across various fields, revisiting Huizinga's theory of play can encourage competing actors to adopt a spirit of play that maintains seriousness, cultivating the cultural ability to balance freedom with order and political passion with ethical norms. This approach serves to reaffirm the fundamental consensus required for peaceful human coexistence.

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    Collective System and Household Production: A Re-Examination of Production Practice in the Period of Agricultural Collectivization
    YAN Yanhua
    Chinese Journal of Sociology    2023, 43 (3): 111-134.  
    Abstract1460)   HTML51)    PDF(pc) (2342KB)(602)       Save
    This paper re-examines the production practices and their industrial consequences during the period of agricultural collectivization through the case study of a tea-producing village in Anxi. It is found that the social transformation during the collectivization period, on the one hand, led to the widespread "de-skilling" of traditional tea merchant families, that is, through the state's agribusiness transformation and redistribution of skills, the collective system broke the monopoly of production skills inherited within the core family and the family specialization. On the other hand, it brought about the "re-skilling" for the majority of community members, that is, through the "paternalistic" production arrangements of the production team leader, tea production skills were disseminated to a wider range of households. The positive impact of the collectivization system on the local tea industry was the result of the interaction between the logic of state governance and local traditions. As a part of the formal state power structure, the production team leaders in the collectivization period were able to use the power endowed by the state to transform the traditional way of family work, so that the corresponding production arrangements were in line with the interests of the collective to the greatest extent, and it ultimately enabled the smooth development of tea garden production. However, although the family production organization was formally abolished during the collectivization period, the logic of the family organization had continued to a certain extent in the actual production organization. The production team, especially the production team leaders' balancing role between the "public family" and the "small family" played the traditional role of family authority. The study points out that it is these important features of collectivization period-the "paternalistic" style leadership of the production team leaders and the household-based production and marketing arrangements spreading production and marketing skills to the majority of households in the community-that ultimately facilitated the development of the family industry and the local tea economy in the post-collectivization period.
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