Catalyzed commoning: Boundary spanners and the politics of rural revitalization in China
Yue LiaoBased on an ethnography of a northern Chinese village, this article examines how collective action emerges amid social atomization and state dominance. Focusing on an entrepreneurial Party Secretary who bridged state bureaucracy, market capital, and village society, I analyze how he mobilized resources to break the deadlock of underdevelopment. Yet this process generated a paradoxical “politics of revitalization”: while delivering economic benefits, the model relied on strongman authority and cultivated a “coalition of the capable” that marginalized resource-poor households. I theorize this dynamic as “catalyzed commoning”—a mode of collective resource management engineered from above by local elites rather than emerging organically from below. By situating these dynamics within the broader state-market nexus, I argue that catalyzed commoning, while effective, ultimately reinforces a form of state-guided entrepreneurial governance that prioritizes efficiency over equity, offering critical insights into the paradoxical nature of elite-driven development in China and beyond.