Party group | |||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 党组 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 黨組 | ||||||
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China portal |
A party group[n 1] (Chinese: 党组; pinyin: dǎngzǔ) is a formal group within an organization that works to ensure democratic centralism as led by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Party groups ensure the control of formally non-CCP public institutions like government organizations, people's organizations, people's congresses, and state-owned business corporations by the CCP.[4] The concept of party group was first formalized in the 1945 party constitution during the 7th National Congress.[5]
Example
The party's Organization Department controlled the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security through an eleven-member party group as of 2010.[2]
Usage outside of the Chinese Communist Party
Party groups were organized within the short-lived Workers' Party of North Korea.[6]
See also
- Party Committee led by the Committee Secretary
Notes
- ↑ Other English translations exist such as leading party group,[1] party core group,[2] and party fraction[3] in a sense of fraktsiya (Russian: фра́кция) within the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
References
- ↑ Low, Ian (2012). Chinese to English Dictionary (Simplified Characters). p. 271. ISBN 978-1908922069.
- 1 2 Burns, John P.; Xiaoqi, Wang (2010). "Civil Service Reform in China: Impacts on Civil Servants' Behaviour" (PDF). The China Quarterly. 201: 61. doi:10.1017/S030574100999107X. hdl:10722/135393. S2CID 153471092.
- ↑ Schurmann, Franz (1973). Ideology and Organization in Communist China. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. xviii.
- ↑ Snape, H.; Wang, W. (2020). "Finding a place for the party: debunking the "party-state" and rethinking the state-society relationship in China's one-party system" (PDF). Journal of Chinese Governance. 5 (4): 14. doi:10.1080/23812346.2020.1796411. S2CID 225396063.
- ↑ "中國共產黨黨章 (1945年)". Wikisource (in Chinese). 1945-06-11.
第九章 党外组织中的党组
- ↑ "당조(黨組)". Encyclopedia of Korean Culture (in Korean). The Academy of Korean Studies.
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