party building
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2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Hongda Liu ◽  
Zhen Yu ◽  
Jijian Zhang ◽  
Pinbo Yao

The university science and technology innovation system is an essential bridge between higher education and national innovation development. Since the founding of the Communist Party of China, the scientific and technological innovation system of Chinese universities has intermingled with the historical environment and internal and external factors and has gone through several stages of development from weak to strong and from fragile to solid. In this process, the Communist Party of China has always been firmly based on the central concept of people-oriented, using a forward-looking vision to develop the macro deployment of the university science and technology innovation system and finally using the combination of ideology and politics, the three-wide education throughout the sustainable development, and optimization of the system, returning to the “university” nature of the university science and technology innovation system, to achieve the fusion of the system and the Party-building development. To this end, the university science and technology system in the new era must continue to uphold the leadership of the Communist Party of China, draw on the power of the three chains led by the Party, inductively form contemporary inspiration from the logic of construction over the past century, and adapt to the complex and changing world situation of the future.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (4(44)) ◽  
pp. 23-26
Author(s):  
Thi Minh Tuyet Tran

It can be said that President Ho Chi Minh always upholds the role of revolutionary morality and Party building in terms of ethics. His thoughts have supplemented the theory of Marxism — Leninism on the Party building. In this article, the author analyzes President Ho Chi Minh’s ideas in Party building in terms of ethics and proposes some methods for currently developing and straightening the Communist Party of Vietnam.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 125-131
Author(s):  
Dengpeng  Jing

With the rapid development of society and economy, grassroots organizations in rural pastoral areas are an important part of party building, shouldering the mission of implementing party policies, and playing an important role in leading herdsmen to fight poverty and realize basic modernization in rural areas. The mission and responsibilities of grassroots party organizations in rural and pastoral areas are undergoing profound changes. Strengthening the construction of grassroots party organizations in rural and pastoral areas will help promote the relationship between the party and the masses, cadres and the masses in rural and pastoral areas, and promote the establishment of party organizations in rural and pastoral areas. At present, grassroots party building in rural pastoral areas is facing new challenges, such as insufficient party organization building, and unclear power boundaries between party organizations and villagers’ autonomous organizations. Only by accelerating the construction of infrastructure and public services in rural pastoral areas and doing a good job in the construction of rural grassroots party organizations can improve the level of party building in rural pastoral areas and promote the basic modernization of rural areas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuhan Guo

As far as higher vocational colleges are concerned, strengthening the party history education research work in the party building work of higher vocational colleges can make the ideological and political education work of higher vocational colleges comprehensively innovate and optimize, and truly integrate the party history education The ideological and political education of higher vocational colleges provides theoretical research basis. In view of this, in the entire party building work of higher vocational colleges, it is necessary to always adhere to the idea of morality and cultivating people during the organization and personnel and party building research work, and focus on innovating the educational philosophy of faculty and staff to study party history. It is also necessary to innovate the communication channels of party history education in higher vocational colleges, focusing on building a good party history education environment for teachers in colleges and universities, so as to make the party building work of higher vocational colleges stable and far-reaching.


2021 ◽  
pp. 135406882110410
Author(s):  
Dan Paget

I ask where African opposition parties organize. Party-building is communicative; it involves persuading people to become activists. The literature suggests that opposition parties organize where people are receptive to their messages and build outwards from there. I study Chadema’s opposition party-building through site-intensive fieldwork. Chadema organized primarily in such receptive areas, but also in four unreceptive constituencies. I use these deviant constituencies to refine the literature. Prior theory neglects the heterogeneity of party-building. I decompose party-building into three modes as follows: by touring leaders, branches and concentrating leaders. Concentrating leaders dedicate their organizing to single places. They employ small rallies which afford interactive, individualized and iterative communication. This personalized communication enables them to overcome initial unreceptiveness to their messages. I conclude that opposition parties can organize in unreceptive areas, but only through the personalized methods of these ‘lone organizers’. Altogether, I show how and through whom opposition parties organize in hostile environments.


Author(s):  
André Borges

Abstract Party development in post-transition Latin America has often proceeded unevenly, as right-wing elites opted for non-partisan forms of political action and conservative parties remained poorly institutionalised. Recent research has demonstrated that party-building was facilitated where the political Right benefited from valuable political assets – party brand, territorial organisation, sources of funding and clientelistic networks – inherited from authoritarian regimes. This article argues that authoritarian inheritance in isolation is insufficient to foster conservative party institutionalisation. It analyses the trajectories of the major right-wing parties in Brazil and Chile, where former authoritarian incumbents benefited extensively from authoritarian inheritance and yet levels of institutionalisation differed widely across parties. The comparative analysis demonstrates that right-wing parties were most likely to consolidate where, in addition to inheriting valuable resources from the dictatorship, they experienced ideologically driven, violent conflict during their early years.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 4818-4828
Author(s):  
Cuiping Xu

Objectives: In the practice of translating English, there are often situations that may lead to missing words. In this case, a computer technology is needed to improve the translation studies of sociological terms in English. This time, based on the characteristics of Internet network data, intelligent robot information is extracted. Methods: According to the knowledge ontology constructed this time, based on the functional equivalence theory, a method based on the automatic construction of the ontology library in the party building domain is proposed. Results: In order to verify the proposed method algorithm, the example study of some sociological terms conceptual terms above the interactive encyclopedia is studied by the ontology created by encyclopedia resources, such as father/sub-relationship, class and instance relationship and attribute relationship, and a total of 72474 relationships are obtained through the final statistical study. Conclusion: From the overall analysis, it can be seen that the sociological terminology research of English computer network based on functional equivalence theory can achieve a good classification effect.


2021 ◽  
pp. 135406882110410
Author(s):  
Sarah J Lockwood ◽  
Matthias Krönke ◽  
Robert Mattes

Political parties are a vital element in the quality of representative democracy, playing a crucial role in mobilization, competition, governance, and accountability. Despite their importance, however, we currently know relatively little about how political parties in Africa are organized, with most evidence restricted to journalistic accounts or country-specific scholarly accounts. This symposium, which comes out of a conference on political parties held at the University of Cape Town, takes a closer look at the development of party structures and organization across the continent. It seeks to answer a number of critical questions including: What affects the organizational structure of parties? How do party primaries affect party-building and electoral success? And what effect does the shrinking of open political space have on the ways in which parties organize? Taken as a whole, this issue brings together established and emerging scholars, to systematically explore, for the first time, what party organization looks like on the African continent, and how it affects critical issues of governance, mobilization, and accountability.


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