The study of popular support for authoritarian regimes has long relied on the assumption that respondents provide truthful answers to surveys. However, when measuring regime support in closed political systems there is a distinct risk that individuals are less than forthright due to fear that their opinions may be made known to the public or the authorities. In order to test this assumption, we conducted a novel web-based survey in China in which we included four list experiments of commonly used items in the comparative literature on regime support. We find systematic bias for all four measures; substantially more individuals state that they support the regime with direct questioning than when presented with our indirect list experiments. ...
China\u27s Internet has been the subject of much public debate as to whether it has contributed to p...
Public opinion polls show that political trust tends to be higher in authoritarian regimes compared ...
Nowadays it is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore that the majority of people are unaware abo...
The study of popular support for authoritarian regimes has long relied on the assumption that respon...
The study of popular support for authoritarian regimes, and the comparative study of political attit...
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 ...
Chinese government censorship of social media constitutes the largest coordinated selective suppress...
What kind of content do citizens in a developing and authoritarian country like to acquire from West...
The Chinese government has long been suspected of hiring as many as 2,000,000 people to surreptitiou...
We offer the first large scale, multiple source analysis of the outcome of what may be the most exte...
A growing body of research suggests that authoritarian regimes are responsive to societal actors, bu...
Internet censorship has been a popular topic both in academia and in the popular press. A fundamenta...
Internet censorship has been a popular topic both in academia and in the popular press. A fundamenta...
Existing research on the extensive Chinese censorship organization uses observational methods with w...
China\u27s Internet has been the subject of much public debate as to whether it has contributed to p...
Public opinion polls show that political trust tends to be higher in authoritarian regimes compared ...
Nowadays it is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore that the majority of people are unaware abo...
The study of popular support for authoritarian regimes has long relied on the assumption that respon...
The study of popular support for authoritarian regimes, and the comparative study of political attit...
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 ...
Chinese government censorship of social media constitutes the largest coordinated selective suppress...
What kind of content do citizens in a developing and authoritarian country like to acquire from West...
The Chinese government has long been suspected of hiring as many as 2,000,000 people to surreptitiou...
We offer the first large scale, multiple source analysis of the outcome of what may be the most exte...
A growing body of research suggests that authoritarian regimes are responsive to societal actors, bu...
Internet censorship has been a popular topic both in academia and in the popular press. A fundamenta...
Internet censorship has been a popular topic both in academia and in the popular press. A fundamenta...
Existing research on the extensive Chinese censorship organization uses observational methods with w...
China\u27s Internet has been the subject of much public debate as to whether it has contributed to p...
Public opinion polls show that political trust tends to be higher in authoritarian regimes compared ...
Nowadays it is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore that the majority of people are unaware abo...