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    Yao Qu. (2021, August 12). Extending Grassroots Power and Mobilizing the People: How the CCP Built a Pervasive Security System in Xinjiang. Project Reports, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/519 Yao Qu. Extending Grassroots Power and Mobilizing the People: How the CCP Built a Pervasive Security System in Xinjiang. Project Reports, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. August 12, 2021. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/519 Yao Qu. Extending Grassroots Power and Mobilizing the People: How the CCP Built a Pervasive Security System in Xinjiang. Project Reports, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. 12 Aug. 2021. n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/519
  • Title: Extending Grassroots Power and Mobilizing the People: How the CCP Built a Pervasive Security System in Xinjiang
  • Description: As part of the crackdown on Turkic people in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) from 2016, Chen Quanguo (陈全国), the current Party secretary in the XUAR, reproduced an all-pervasive security system across the region from his Tibetan experience, called the Ten Family Joint Defence groups (TFJD, 十户联防), which involves almost all residents in public security activities in the name of ‘counterterrorism.’ The TFJD is not a new invention by the XUAR authority; on the contrary, it is a result of decades of efforts by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to extend its power at the grassroots level and a long history of mobilizing the people as a way to organize security forces at a low cost in earlier Chinese regimes (both Imperial and Republican).
  • Creator: Yao Qu
  • Publisher: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Date: Thursday, August 12, 2021
  • Language: English
  • Format: PDF
  • Source: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Subject: State Surveillance
  • Keywords: data collection | eliminating extremism | grassroots governance (基层治理) | security system
  • Item Type: Document
  • Collection: Project Reports
    • Additional Details
    • Description: As part of the crackdown on Turkic people in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) from 2016, Chen Quanguo (陈全国), the current Party secretary in the XUAR, reproduced an all-pervasive security system across the region from his Tibetan experience, called the Ten Family Joint Defence groups (TFJD, 十户联防), which involves almost all residents in public security activities in the name of ‘counterterrorism.’ The TFJD is not a new invention by the XUAR authority; on the contrary, it is a result of decades of efforts by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to extend its power at the grassroots level and a long history of mobilizing the people as a way to organize security forces at a low cost in earlier Chinese regimes (both Imperial and Republican).