Kevin O'Brien

Alann P. Bedford Chair of Asian Studies and
Professor of Political Science

Email: kobrien@berkeley.edu
Phone: (510) 642-4689
Office Location: 712 Barrows
Office Hours: W, 12:15-2:15, 505 2223 Fulton St
Spring 2008 Course: PS191-2 Junior Seminar: Protest and Reform in Contemporary China

Kevin O'Brien in his officeKevin O'Brien received his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1987. Professor O'Brien's research focuses on Chinese politics in the reform era. His most recent work centers on theories of popular contention, particularly the origins, dynamics and outcomes of "rightful resistance" in rural China. He is the author of Reform Without Liberalization: China's National People's Congress and the Politics of Institutional Change, as well as articles on legislative politics, local elections, fieldwork strategies, popular protest, policy implementation, and village-level political reform. One of his articles, "Popular Contention and Its Impact in Rural China," Comparative Political Studies (April 2005), was a co-winner of the Sage Award for Best Paper in Comparative Politics delivered at the 2004 American Political Science Association Meeting. He is the co-editor of a book entitled Engaging the Law in China: State, Society and Possibilities for Justice (Stanford, 2005) and the editor of Popular Protest in China, which will be published by Harvard University Press in fall 2008. He is also the co-author of Rightful Resistance in Rural China (Cambridge, 2006).


Rightful Resistance in Rural China

"To the study of resistance, this superb book, is akin to the discovery of a major ‘new species.’ ‘Rightful resistance’ may well be the most significant form of popular protest in quasi-authoritarian systems. This closely-reasoned, broadly comparative and innovative book will inspire many new research programs in its wake."
- James C. Scott, Yale University

"This slim volume is a little gem. After spending more than a decade researching rural protest in post-reform China, O'Brien and Li have masterfully synthesized their collaborative work in this elegantly written book. While providing substantive new material from recent surveys and interviews, as well as from research by various Chinese scholars, this book is first of all a theoretical contribution to the literature on social protest. As such, it should attract the attention of scholars both within and beyond the China field. . . In conclusion, the book defines rightful resistance with utmost clarity and rigour. The size of the volume is deceptive: this is a theoretical book, never overburdened with empirical evidence. But nonetheless there is evidence, succinctly recalled where necessary. The same holds for the innovative theoretical advances. Thoroughly familiar with the literature on popular protest, the authors succinctly mention relevant works, wasting no space on secondary digressions. This closely reasoned, clearly argued book is eminently suitable for teaching adoption in the fields of Chinese studies and political science."
- Lucien Bianco, China Quarterly

"The book is a pleasure to read. Practically every step of the argument is solidly support by empirical data – either the author’s own interviews or material from a huge bulk of Chinese and Western scholarly literature on rural China – and practically every observation is interpreted in light of the general social science literature on popular movements, protest, resistance etc. and then used to question, expand, and revise general concepts and perceptions. In this sense, the book shows how the study of China can contribute social science theory, rather than just testing whether general concepts fit or do not fit the Chinese case. It is lucidly written, and will certainly be a landmark for future debates about Chinese rural politics.”
- Stig Thogersen, Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies


Cover of Rightful Resistance in Rural China


Engaging the Law in China

Engaging the Law in China is conspicuously eclectic, appealing to diverse audiences. Authors from various fields (political science, sociology, and law) use diverse methodologies (participant-observation, in-depth interviews, and archival studies) to pursue their topics. The extensive use of anecdotal materials and the minimal use of jargon make the book highly readable, even for the general public. It is particularly informative for students and scholars interested in the complex interaction between law and society, and how such interaction unfolds in a society distinct from Western legal institutions.”
- Song Yang, Law and Society Review

“In recent years ‘edited volumes’ have been out of favor with many academic as well as commercial publishers. I have never understood the bias against them. Often the product of stimulating conferences, if thoughtfully organized and edited their diversity of approach to a central theme can bring gratifying illumination. Surely this is the case with Engaging the Law in China. Those who want to know whether contemporary China has a legal system and how it functions might well start with this slender volume. This is no dry dissection of the huge number of laws promulgated by the People’s Republic of China during the past quarter century.”
- Jerome Cohen, Far Eastern Economic Review


Cover of Engaging the Law in China


Reform Without Liberalization

"...a perceptive and suggestive book....If democracy is ever to come to China, people can look back to this book as the first to tell what changes had to come to produce a real legislature."
- Lucian Pye, China Quarterly

"...a most thorough and comprehensive examination of mainland China's National People's Congress. As such, his work fills a void in the study of Chinese politics, and I suspect that it will stand as the definitive study of China's NPC for many years to come. Moreover, this book's appeal will not be limited only to those who study China. It should prove useful both to students of comparative politics and to those who study legislative behavior. In sum, O'Brien has completed a significant work which is worthy of considerable attention."
- Dennis Hickey, Social Science Quarterly

"In fact, this is the best account on the subject by far. It should be recommended to all who are interested in contemporary Chinese politics."
- Young-tsu Wong, The Historian


Cover of Reform Without Liberalization

View my Vita

Full-Text of Some of My Articles:

Popular Protest Village Elections Miscellaneous Legislatures

View my syllabi:

See pictures of my daughter (European Trip 2007 and Spring 2008)!

Molly in kunqu opera makeup (October 2005)

Charles and Louise Travers
Department of Political Science
210 Barrows Hall
UC Berkeley
Berkeley, CA 94720-1950

Phone: 642-6323
Fax: 642-9515
psfront@berkeley.edu