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ARTICLE

Crossing Over the Line: Obtrusive Neon-Light Crosses, New Religious Laws, and Quandaries over Civil Society in the Contemporary People's Republic of China

Written by

Lauren F. Pfister

|  Published on

April 1, 2021

ABSTRACT

The aim of this chapter is not to debate the nature of civil society in the con- temporary PRC)but to indicate how the development of a“narrow rule of law”in recent years-following the forceful removal of crosses from the roofs of Christian church buildings in Zhejiang Province in 2014 and 2016-has led to “a diminishing civil society". In other words,the ideal development of“democratic centralism”³in the PRC in recent years-what I describe as actually seeking to achieve a form of“demophilic centralism" has led,instead, to a form of civil life in the PRC that is more uncomfortable, relationally tense, and generally more anxiety-ridden for individuals,but also especially within social circles of religious groups that have not yet discovered an effective way to apply “public interest law" to their situations.

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