China's 'New-Type' Private Think Tanks: Is 'New' Better?
Abstract
China’s public policy research community has long been dominated by large state-run research institutes, but in recent years financially and bureaucratically independent think tanks have played a more prominent role. While private think tanks have used a variety of strategies to secure funding and access to officials, a major constraint is the continuing influence of their state-run counterparts. What are the conditions under which private institutes can prosper in this environment, both in terms of providing meaningful advice and developing prestigious brands? This essay theorizes that these goals can be achieved under three conditions: when human capital is leveraged to provide new advice, when networks are deployed to build bridges between scholarly communities, and when effective use of information technology supports the dissemination of research outputs. An organization’s ability to meet those criteria depends both on resource endowments and on willingness to buck the conventional wisdom.
Document Type
Article
Topic(s)
Defense Policy
Region(s)
East Asia
Publication Date
6-8-2020
Recommended Citation
Wuthnow, Joel and Chen, Dingding, "China's 'New-Type' Private Think Tanks: Is 'New' Better?" (2020). Articles and Op-Eds. 3.
https://digitalcommons.ndu.edu/cscma-articles/3