Despite massive investment in China’s censorship program, internet platforms in China are rife with criticisms of the government and content that seeks to organize opposition to the ruling Communist Party. Past works have attributed this “openness” to deliberate government strategy or lack of capacity. Most, however, do not consider the role of private social media companies, to whom the state delegates information controls. I suggest that the apparent incompleteness of censorship is largely a result of principal-agent problems that arise due to misaligned incentives of government principals and private media company agents. Using a custom dataset of annotated leaked documents from a social media company, Sina Weibo, I find that 16% of dire...
Content control and censorship on the Internet are increasingly important topics for scholars of dem...
Existing research on the extensive Chinese censorship organization uses observational methods with w...
This study explores an under-studied layer of Chinese Internet censorship: how Chinese Internet comp...
In this paper, we examine how the Chinese state controls social media. While social media companies ...
A large body of literature devoted to analyzing information control in China concludes that we find ...
China’s censorship infrastructure is widely recognized as sophisticated, strict, and comprehensive. ...
Social media’s role in facilitating anti-authoritarian protests has received much recent attention. ...
This paper helps clarify the internal mechanisms of the Chinese censorship apparatus and show that ...
In this chapter we explore how practices of security governmentality are enacted in everydaycensorsh...
Chinese government censorship of social media constitutes the largest selective suppression of human...
America’s basic rights are founded on the principle of freedom of speech. This allows America to thr...
This study provides a survey of how the Chinese Communist Party\u27s information control affects the...
This study explores an under-studied layer of Chinese Internet censorship: how Chinese Internet comp...
This paper explores new developments in cyber content management strategies in China by highlighting...
Chinese government censorship of social media constitutes the largest coordinated selective suppress...
Content control and censorship on the Internet are increasingly important topics for scholars of dem...
Existing research on the extensive Chinese censorship organization uses observational methods with w...
This study explores an under-studied layer of Chinese Internet censorship: how Chinese Internet comp...
In this paper, we examine how the Chinese state controls social media. While social media companies ...
A large body of literature devoted to analyzing information control in China concludes that we find ...
China’s censorship infrastructure is widely recognized as sophisticated, strict, and comprehensive. ...
Social media’s role in facilitating anti-authoritarian protests has received much recent attention. ...
This paper helps clarify the internal mechanisms of the Chinese censorship apparatus and show that ...
In this chapter we explore how practices of security governmentality are enacted in everydaycensorsh...
Chinese government censorship of social media constitutes the largest selective suppression of human...
America’s basic rights are founded on the principle of freedom of speech. This allows America to thr...
This study provides a survey of how the Chinese Communist Party\u27s information control affects the...
This study explores an under-studied layer of Chinese Internet censorship: how Chinese Internet comp...
This paper explores new developments in cyber content management strategies in China by highlighting...
Chinese government censorship of social media constitutes the largest coordinated selective suppress...
Content control and censorship on the Internet are increasingly important topics for scholars of dem...
Existing research on the extensive Chinese censorship organization uses observational methods with w...
This study explores an under-studied layer of Chinese Internet censorship: how Chinese Internet comp...