Articles by Sarah Lee

Sarah Lee

Sarah Lee is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Baylor University. Her research interests include religion and politics, authoritarian regimes, and state-society relations as seen in the contexts of comparative politics and international relations. Her dissertation explores the Chinese Communist Party’s selective treatment of Protestant churches based on fieldwork in 15 Chinese cities and using mixed methodologies. Sarah received her PhD and MA in Political Science from UC Berkeley, MA in International Relations from Peking University, and BA in Government from Dartmouth College.

 

Supporting Article

Pastors in China’s New Era

Lee explains the three main reasons why the Communist Party is wary of Protestants: their faith is seen as an ideological threat to the Party, churches can bring foreign influence, and they are a collective action threat. She then explains the various ways pastors are dealing with the actions the Party is using to hold them in line.