Formation | 1991 |
---|---|
Type | Coordination and policy advisory body |
Location |
|
Chairman
|
Meng Jianzhu |
Vice Chairman
|
Chen Xunqiu |
Chief of General Office
|
Chen Xunqiu |
Parent organization
|
Central Committee of the Communist Party of China |
Affiliations | Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China |
Formerly called
|
Central Public Security Comprehensive Management Commission |
The Central Public Security Comprehensive Management Commission (Chinese: 中央社会管理综合治理委员会; pinyin: Zhōngyāng Shèhuì Guǎnlǐ Zōnghé Zhìlǐ Wěiyuánhuì) is an organ under the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, charged with providing assistance to the Party and the State Council of the People's Republic of China in matters concerning law enforcement and social management. Its chairman usually is also member of the Politburo and secretary of the Central Politics and Law Commission.
Its functions go from setting major policies of social management, to coordinating all national and local work on this field, and even to dispatching central cadres to guide or control local work.
It was known as Central Commission for the Comprehensive Management of Public Security (中央社会治安综合治理委员会) before its reorganisation in September 2011 under Zhou Yongkang, when it became known as the Central Commission for Comprehensive Social Management (中央社会管理综合治理委员会), and saw a commensurate increase of its jurisdiction and broadened powers. The head of the commission, Zhou, was also a member of the elite Politburo Standing Committee (PSC). However, in October 2014, the commission reverted to its former name of Central Commission for the Comprehensive Management of Public Security and its corresponding expansion of powers were also rescinded. Zhou Yongkang fell into political disgrace after his retirement and many of the institutions that spawned under his watch were reined in the new power structure under Xi Jinping. Meng Jianzhu assumed the office of Chairman in 2012 as the concurrent Secretary of the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission and a member of the Politburo; Meng was not a member of the PSC.