Author(s): Ziteng Fan, Yijia Jing, Shaowei Chen
Journal: Government Information Quarterly
Language: English
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.giq.2025.102034
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While local governments' ambivalence toward and strategic behaviors in e-participation reforms have recently attracted surging scholarly attention, insufficient scholarly attention has been paid to horizontal strategic interactions among local governments, which have salient implications for the effectiveness of e-participation reforms. This research aims to fill this gap using the case of China's e-participation reform. By examining the complex intra-regime bureaucratic dynamics in e-participation, we assert that local governments are confronted with an e-participation dilemma, making blame avoidance (BA) the primary motivation in implementing e-participation mandates. Furthermore, we argue that local governments tend to adopt a particular BA strategy, the bandwagon strategy, to cope with the dilemma. Additionally, patronage ties, a crucial informal political institution, weaken their tendency to engage in the bandwagon strategy. Using a unique dataset on provincial governments' e-participation policy priorities, our empirical analyses with panel data spatial econometric models obtain robust evidence that supports our theory.
Fan, Z., Jing, Y. & Chen, S. (2025). Bringing in Horizontal Strategic Interactions: Blame Avoidance and Local Governments’ Bandwagon Strategy in Prioritizing E-participation, Government Information Quarterly, 42(2): 102034