China's Media in the Emerging World Order by Hugo De Burgh;

China's Media in the Emerging World Order by Hugo De Burgh;

Author:Hugo De Burgh;
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781789550948
Publisher: Legend Press


NOTES

1. de Burgh H. Verso la pagoda della gru gialla con il nostro ombrello bucherellato: riflessioni sul futuro dei media cinesi (Towards the Yellow Crane Pavilion with our Leaky Umbrella: Reflections on the future of the Chinese Media). Lecture given at Universita degli Studi, Milan; 27 December 2012.

2. China Dialogue. Xiamen PX: a turning point? [Online]. 2008 [cited 11 February 2013]. Available at: http://www.chinadialogue.net/article/show/single/en/1626-Xiamen-PX-a-turning-point- (Accessed: 17 March 2016).

3. Mason, Paul (2014) Striking Chinese workers are using 21st century tools to fight poverty and sweated labour. The Guardian, 15 September 2014, pp 5.

4. See Karatzogianni, Athina and Robinson, Andrew (2015) A cyberconflict analysis of Chinese dissidents focusing on civil society, mass incidents and labour resistance. In: Rawnsley Gary D. and Rawnsley, Ming-Yeh T. (eds.) Routledge Handbook of Chinese Media, London: Routledge, for examples of how protests launched through the Internet have had results: protest against the building of a petrochemical plant in Ningbo was successful in forcing cancellation of the project within two days pp 225; a protest against the extension of a train line, which would reduce house values and pose a health risk; a hardline drive to enforce the one child policy in Guangxi resulted in protests which led to the reversal of policies; in Wukan energetic resistance to land seizures by resulted not only in the policy being reversed but also the villages be allowed to elect their own leaders pp 229.

5. Herrman, John and Isaac, Mike (2016) Allegations of bias at Facebook stir backlash across the political spectrum in International New York Times, May 11, 2016 p19; Rutenberg, Jim (2016) Crisis at Facebook only highlights its power, International New York Times, Monday, May 23, 2016, p13

6. Mullins, Brody and Nicas, Jack (2017) Google’s Quiet Influence Campaign, in The Wall Street Journal, July 12, 2017, pp1, A6.

7. Cited in Yang Guobin (2012) Chinese Internet? History, practice, and globalization. Chinese Journal of Communication, vol 5, no1, March 2012, pp 50.

8. Ibid., pp 49 to 54.

9. Beech, Hannah (2015) The other side of the great firewall, London. Time Magazine, pp 27. [Online]. Available at: http://intca.org/china-great-firewall/ (Accessed: 7 March 2016).

10. Guo, Zhengbiao et al (2011) ‘Sina Microblog: An Information-driven Online Social Network’. International Conference on Cyberworlds, Banff: IEEE, pp 160-167.

11. Shi, Baoyin and Qi, Xin (2015) Henan judges conduct trials on WeChat. China Daily, 124/01/16, pp 4 (at Zhengzhou Intermediate People’s Court).

12. Yang (2012), pp 50.

13. The National Internet Information Office 国家互联网信息办公室 was separated off from the SCIO and made accountable to the State Council directly in May 2011. It was to advance the legal framework for Internet communication, support the development of news websites, and regulate traffic, including gaming and videos. Its first Director was Wang Chen 王晨. The SIO was subsumed into the CAC in 2014, and no longer exists as an independent entity.

14. See, for example, China Daily on 16 December 2015 ‘Intertwining with traditional sectors to be key’, pp C5 and other articles in the same section which assess the influence of the Internet on the economy, or predict its future.



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