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Is China authoritarian? Evidence, narratives, and contested frameworks

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak* 
China is frequently described as an authoritarian state governed by the Communist Party of China (CPC). Such characterisations are advanced by various media outlets, think tanks, intellectuals, and affiliated institutions. These assessments draw, in part, on frameworks promoted by American political establishments, including the U.S. government and its agencies. For example, the unclassified document titled "The Elements of the China Challenge," published by the Policy Planning Staff in the Office of the U.S. Secretary of State, has been criticised by some scholars as presenting a one-sided account of China's political system. The narratives in this document provide a broader framework for discourse on China that is adopted and amplified by media organisations worldwide. Such narratives, critics argue, risk obscuring the complexity of China's development model and its relationship to prevailing global economic arrangements.
Some liberal and conservative intellectuals engage with anti-China narratives without sufficient empirical grounding or critical scrutiny. The unclassified paper by the Policy Planning Staff in the Office of the U.S. Secretary of State repeatedly characterises the CPC as authoritarian and portrays the Chinese state as pursuing hegemonic ambitions globally. Scholars who contest this framing argue that such ideologically driven narratives fail to account for China's developmental achievements and risk delegitimising alternative models of political economy.
Authoritarianism, as both an ideology and a political project, is commonly understood to reject pluralism in order to preserve the status quo, concentrate power, and dominate society. China, by contrast, officially recognises fifty-six ethnic groups, including fifty-five minority groups, and promotes cultural and social plurality as a matter of state policy. The country has established autonomous regions — such as the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region — as a means of decentralising governance and acknowledging the distinct identity, culture, and traditions of the Hui people. The Chinese state also promotes interethnic social interaction, including interethnic marriage, with the stated aim of fostering social and ethnic integration and mitigating Han majoritarian tendencies. Whether these policies constitute genuine pluralism or reflect a particular model of managed diversity remains a subject of scholarly debate.
Authoritarian states are often characterised by the visible deployment of coercive security forces. Some observers note that everyday life in many parts of China does not obviously reflect this pattern. Visitors travelling between cities such as Shanghai, Xi'an, and Beijing have remarked on the relative scarcity of visible security police, including highway patrols, in many public spaces. At the level of local governance, the CPC's local committees function as mechanisms through which community-level representation and policy implementation are organised, though assessments of how effectively local interests are transmitted to central leadership vary considerably among analysts.
Authoritarianism is also commonly associated with the suppression of political plurality. China's political system includes eight political parties operating within the framework of united front cooperation with the CPC. These parties hold membership in the National People's Congress (NPC), the highest organ of state power in the People's Republic of China, and participate in consultative processes through formal mechanisms of political cooperation. Proponents of this system describe it as one in which diverse professional, social, and ideological interests are represented through institutional channels. Critics, however, note that all eight parties operate within the broader leadership structure of the CPC rather than as opposition parties in a competitive multiparty electoral system, and that meaningful political contestation remains constrained. The distinction between multi-party cooperation and competitive electoral democracy is central to how China's political system is evaluated by different analytical traditions.
In terms of institutional organisation, China operates through a decentralised administrative hierarchy spanning domains from healthcare to education. Some observers report relatively egalitarian working relationships within Chinese institutions, including between medical and teaching staff. Whether such observations are generalisable across the country's diverse institutional landscape is difficult to assess without systematic comparative data.
The question of civil liberties and human rights in China is among the most contested in contemporary political discourse. Proponents of the Chinese system argue that citizens move and speak freely, practise their culture and religion, and have access to effective channels of political participation. Critics — including international human rights organisations, foreign governments, and some Chinese citizens — document significant restrictions on freedom of expression, assembly, and religion, particularly in regions such as Xinjiang and Tibet, as well as constraints on press freedom and political dissent more broadly. A rigorous evaluation of authoritarianism in China requires engagement with this body of evidence alongside the arguments made by its defenders.
The question of whether China constitutes an authoritarian state is, therefore, one that merits careful empirical and conceptual analysis. Assessments should account for the specific features, mechanisms, and outcomes of China's political system, rather than relying solely on frameworks derived from either Western liberal democracy or from uncritical celebration of the Chinese model. Serious scholarship on this question demands engagement with evidence from multiple sources, attentiveness to the diversity of China's political and social landscape, and clarity about the analytical standards being applied.
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*Academic based in UK 

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