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baojia 保甲, the communal self-defence system

Jan 22, 2016 © Ulrich Theobald

Baojia 保甲 was a system of communal self-defence created during the Song period 宋 (960-1279) and still used during the Republican era (1912-1949). It was a specialization of the lijia system 里甲 used for local self-administration. Emperor Shenzong 宋神宗 (r. 1067-1085), inspired by the reformer Wang Anshi 王安石 (1021-1086), initiated the system as the "law on security groups" (baojiafa 保甲法) and ordered that each ten households were to build a security group (bao 保), fifty a large security group (dabao 大保) and five hundred a superior security group (dubao 都保). The first was headed by a headman (baozhang 保長), the second by a great headman (da baozhang 大保長), and the third by a superior head and a vice superior head (dubaozheng 都保正, fubaozheng 副保正). Each household with more than two male adults was to provide one security guard (baoding 保丁), in yet in later times the numbers were reduced to one security guard for five households, with one security group for 25 households, and one superior security group for 250 households. In their leisure time, when no agricultural work was required, the "strongmen" (caiyong 材勇) of each village were trained in martial arts. The security groups exercised police powers, organised night watches and were responsible for arresting delinquents.

The aim of this system was twofold. On the one hand, the security system relieved the local government of administrative duties. The members of each security group cared for the proper registration of their households, mutually observed each other (an old method called lianzuofa 連坐法), and in addition to that, organised the defence of the village community. In that way, the security system was a kind of local militia taking over duties normally carried out by military garrisons. For this purpose, the members of the security groups were trained in simple techniques of defence and attack, and those around the capital Kaifeng 開封 (today in Henan province) obtained regular military training, at least in the initial years of the system, to support the regular military. The main effect of the system was that government expenditure for local security decreased. Instead of the government dispatching troops or paying policing forces, the local population itself was responsible for law and order in their own district. During the reign of Emperor Zhezong 宋哲宗 (r. 1085-1100) the military training of the security guards was abolished.

The system remained in use throught the end of the Qing dynasty 清 (1644-1911) and was in 1932 revived by Chiang Kai-shek 蔣介石 (1887-1975) in the provinces of Henan, Hubei and Anhui. Terminology and organisation differed from the traditional system. Each household provided one household head (huzhang 戶長), and ten households constituted one tithing (jia 甲), headed by a tithing head (jiazhang 甲長). Ten tithings were one security group (bao) headed by a security head (baozhang), residing in a local security office (jiaban gongchu 甲辦公處). From 1934 on the system was extended to all cities under the jurisdiction of the Guomindang 國民黨, and in 1937 to all provinces. The government issued statues for the security groups (Baojia tiaoli 保甲條例). The main purpose was that the population mutually took an eye on each other and so prevented the formation of "rebellions" (i.e. Communist infiltration). The measure was part of Chiang's strategy of encircling and destroying (weijiao 圍剿) Communist groups. The security groups worked according to four aspects, namely administration and observation (guan 管), political indoctrination (jiao 教), taxation (yang 養, lit. "nourishment") and safeguarding (wei 衛). During the Sino-Japanese War the system was intensified, and the security groups were politicized (danghua 黨化, with a Guomingdang representative in each group), transformed into virtual police groups (jingchahua 警察化), obtained special privileges (tewuhua 特務化) and in the end were made para-military units (junshihua 軍事化). The groups were of course disbanded in 1949.

Sources:
Li Jianye 劉建業, ed. (1997). Zongguo kang Ri zhanzheng da cidian 中國抗日戰爭大辭典 (Beijing: Beijing Yanshan chubanshe), 277.
Lü Zongli 呂宗力, ed. (1994). Zhongguo lidai guanzhi da cidian 中國歷代官制大辭典 (Beijing: Beijing chubanshe), 613.
Pi Chunxie 皮純協, Xu Liming 徐理明, Cao Wenguang 曹文光, ed. (1986). Jianming zhengzhixue cidian 簡明政治學辭典 (Zhengzhou: Henan renmin chubanshe), 508.
Yang Liqiang 楊立強, Liu Qikui 劉其奎, ed. (1989). Jianming Zhonghua minguo shi cidian 簡明中華民國史辭典 (Zhengzhou: Henan renmin chubanshe), 394.
Wang Songling 王松齡, ed. (1991). Shiyong Zhongguo lishi zhishi cidian 實用中國歷史知識辭典 (Changchun: Jilin wenshi chubanshe), 279.
Xiao Jiwen 肖季文 (1998). "Baojiafa 保甲法", in Tang Jiahong 唐嘉弘, ed. Zhongguo gudai dianzhang zhidu da cidian 中國古代典章制度大辭典 (Zhengzhou: Zhongzhou guji chubanshe), 28.
Zeng Yeying 曾業英 (1992). "Baojia zhidu 保甲制度", in Zhongguo da baike quanshu 中國大百科全書, Zhongguo lishi 中國歷史 (Beijing/Shanghai: Zhongguo da baike quanshu chubanshe), Vol. 1, 25.

Further reading:
Cheung, Sui-wai (2009). "Baojia System", in David Pong, ed. Encyclopedia of Modern China (Detroit/London: Gale Cengage Learning), 136-137.
Harris, Lane J. (2002). "'Recycling' the baojia in Republican China: A Study of the baojia under the Guomindang, 1927-1949", Occassional Papers in East Asian Studies, 6: 46-79.
Harris, Lane J. (2013). "From Democracy to Bureaucracy: The baojia in Nationalist Thought and Practice, 1927-1949", Frontiers of History in China, 8/4: 517-557.
Landdeck, Kevin (2014). "Chicken-Footed Gods or Village Protectors: Conscription, Community, and Conflict in Rural Sichuan, 1937-1945", Frontiers of History in China, 9/1: 56-82.
Smith, Paul Jakov (2006). “"Shuihu zhuan and the Military Subculture of the Northern Song, 960-1127", Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 66/2: 363-422.
Xie, Xueshi (2007). "The Organization and Grassroots Structure of the Manzhouguo Regime", in Stephen R. Mackinnon, Diana Lary, Ezra F. Vogel, eds. China at War: Regions of China, 1937-1945 (Stanford: Stanford University Press), 134-147.