neo-authoritarianism

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

neo- +‎ authoritarianism

Noun edit

neo-authoritarianism (uncountable)

  1. A post-Maoist current in Chinese political thought favoring enlightened autocracy.
    • 2019 March 20, Hualing Fu, “Touching the Proverbial Elephant: The Multiple Shades of Chinese Law”, in China Perspectives[1], volume 2019, number 1, →ISSN, pages 3–9:
      As neo-authoritarianism advances, the [Chinese Communist] Party moves to the front stage and becomes hands-on in managing important affairs, crowding out legal rules and institutions. It has expanded and solidified a prerogative state to solve politically sensitive matters through substantively extra-legal methods.
  2. Any present-day phenomenon of authoritarianism.
    • 2021 May 10, Massimiliano Tomba, “Neo-Authoritarianism without Authority”, in CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture[2], volume 23, number 1, →DOI, →ISSN:
      Neo-authoritarianism has neither fascist black shirts nor the Nazi’s brown-shirts. It would be misleading to try to understand the neo-authoritarian phenomenon by focusing on some groups that exhibit the swastika.

References edit

  • Li, He (2015) “Neo-authoritarianism”, in Political Thought and China’s Transformation: Ideas Shaping Reform in Post-Mao China, Palgrave Macmillan UK, →ISBN, pages 31–45