Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2009
In a political environment that remains (at best) officially sceptical about the enterprise, representative surveys on Chinese politics have nevertheless grown substantially in number in the past two decades: political scientists trained and based outside mainland China conducted a mere two such surveys in the 1980s, but the number increased more than tenfold in the 1990s and continues to rise steadily.
1 For a broader status report and reflection on survey research, see my “A survey of survey research on Chinese politics: what have we learned?” in Allen Carlson, Mary Gallagher, Kenneth Lieberthal and Melanie Manion (eds.), Chinese Politics: New Sources, Methods, and Field Strategies (in preparation).
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