Published: Feb. 23, 2018

Woman squatting, burying head in arms, in front of earthquake devastation of Sichuan ChinaAs we approach the 10thanniversary of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, it is worth reflecting on the post-earthquake reconstruction from the perspective of what was built, why was it built, and ultimately for whom was it built? Based on my bookShaken Authority: China’s Communist Party and the 2008 Sichuan Earthquake, I argue that the Chinese Communist Party viewed the post-quake reconstruction as an opportunity to achieve a political “miracle” and “great leap of development” in the Sichuan countryside.

But many of the earthquake survivors did not experience the reconstruction as something intended to improve their lives. Instead, they perceived the reconstruction as an elaborate performance of the Communist Party’s glory and benevolence, which often times was enacted at their own expense, and in contrast to their own perceived needs and desires.

In this talk, I argue that the Communist Party is discursively path dependent on specific narratives of legitimation, which constrain its ability to govern and be responsive to people's needs. In particular, I will discuss the post-2008 Sichuan earthquake reconstructionof Yingxiu township,which was reconstructed to performthe Party's benevolence, with scant consideration for its impact on the lives of local residents.

is currently an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Colorado College. He is the author ofShaken Authority: China’s Communist Party and the 2008 Sichuan Earthquakepublished in May 2017 with Cornell University Press. His articles have appeared inCritical Inquiry, Comparative Politics, The China Journal, andThe China Quarterlyamong other journals. He is also the editor of the Arts and Culture section of a new open-access quarterly journal calledMade in China.His new research focuses on comparative urbanization and land-rights in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia and Inner Mongolia, China.

This colloquium is co-sponsored by the .
Hosted by Tim Oakes.