Talk given at 2009 Annenberg-Oxford Summer Institute - Program in Comparative Media Law and Policy (The Center for Socio-legal Studies at University of Oxford)
Annenberg-Oxford Summer Institute - Min Jiang - Authoritarian Deliberation On Chinese Internet
1. Authoritarian Deliberation
on Chinese Internet
2009 Annenberg/Oxford Summer Institute
July 5-18, 2009
@ University of Oxford
Min Jiang
Assistant Professor
Department of Communication Studies
UNC-Charlotte
Email: mjiang3@uncc.edu
2. Chinese Internet Population
► 298 million Internet users (CNNIC, 2009)
► 2/3 under age 30
► 162 million bloggers (more than ½ of China’s netizens)
► 700 million mobile phone users (½ of Chinese population)
► 117 million Internet mobile phone users
Photos courtesy of MinnPost.Com, eChinaCities.com
3. Cyber Censorship and Its Myths
Photo LEFT: Mobinode.com and RIGHT: Wikimedia.org
Images MIDDLE from: http://www.wired.com/politics/security/magazine/15-11/ff_chinafirewall?currentPage=all
http://politicsoffthegrid.wordpress.com/2008/07/02/chinese-bloggers-overpower-the-great-firewall-of-china/
4. “We Chinese Need to be Controlled”?
Jackie Chan:
Media quoted me out
of context
Dai Qincheng: (HK)
Netizens demand
Jackie Chan be sent
to North Korea
(reprint)
Han Han:
Read the Emperor’s
mind like Jackie Chan
ChinaNet, douban, Sina Blog (April 23, 2009)
5. Modern Authoritarianism is Deliberative
Patriotism + Legitimacy based on performance
Photo LEFT: http://www.flickr.com/photos/33673641@N00/1251068537
Photo RIGHT: http://rss.xinhuanet.com/newsc/english/2008-05/14/content_8168699.htm
6. Spaces of Authoritarian Deliberation
► Central propaganda spaces
► Government-regulated commercial spaces
► Emergent civic spaces
► International deliberative spaces
9. Central Propaganda Spaces 3
Salary increase is
offset by rise in
housing price
Hundreds of billions of bad
debt is caused by the
banks’ mismanagement of
of state-owned assets. But
average folks eventually
foot the bill.
10. Central Propaganda Spaces 4
“We pay great attention to
suggestions and advice
from our netizens. We
stress “putting people first”
and “governing for the
people.” Therefore we listen
to people’s voices and
capitalize on people’s
wisdom when we solve
problems and make
decisions. The Internet is
an important channel for us
to know public concerns
and collect public wisdoms.”
- President Hu Jingtao
June 20, 2008
Photo by Li Ke, ChinaNet from http://tv.people.com.cn/GB/7398332.html
11. Central Propaganda Spaces 5
Public Opinion
Channel
Deng Yujiao Incident:
Self defense or
voluntary manslaughter?
Shoddy Buildings:
Who’s responsible for students’
lives after the quake?
12. Government-regulated Commercial Spaces 1
Number of Websites under Various Top Applications
Domain Names in China
Domain
Quantity Proportion Online Music (83.7%)
Name
Online News (78.5%)
.CN 2,216,437 77%
Instant Messaging (75%)
.COM 552,898 19.2%
.NET 87,713 3% Search Engine (68%)
.ORG 21,005 0.7% Online Video (67.7%)
Total 2,878,053 100.0% Online Gaming (62.8%)
Source: 23rd CNNIC Statistical Survey Report on the Internet Development in China (January 2009)
21. Emergent Civic Spaces 5
Activity Types:
online; meetups
sports; edu/lectures/
study groups
entertainment/games
May 1st. Where /movies
to go? concerts/exhibition
travel
conference
public service
Work experience
project: Wash dishes
at restaurants
27. Future Research
► Engage reform-minded bureaucrats?
► How to grow China’s emergent civil society?
► Patterns of online information sharing,
civic/political discourse, collective action?
► How to engage China’s digital generations?
► Online authoritarian deliberation’s long-term
impact on civic/political participation?