4.3 Article

Online counter-mobilisation via social media: Exploration of pro-regime opinion leaders in Hong Kong under Chinese sovereignty

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Political Science

The Institutional Foundation of Countermobilization: Elites and Pro-Regime Grassroots Organizations in Post-Handover Hong Kong

Samson Yuen

Summary: Research indicates that political institutions play a crucial role in facilitating countermobilization by autocrats, as they incentivize elite intermediaries to organize the masses and develop mobilization capacity. Thus, political institutions serve as a conduit for the state to extend social control.

GOVERNMENT AND OPPOSITION (2023)

Article Communication

Constructing patriotic networked publics: conservative YouTube influencers in Hong Kong

Hiu-Fung Chung et al.

Summary: This commentary article examines the formation of patriotic networked publics in post-crisis Hong Kong, focusing on the emergence of pro-government YouTube channels. The study finds that these influencers have reshaped and reinforced the fragmented and polarized media landscape in Hong Kong by utilizing a mixture of nationalistic, conservative, and populist orientations. They strategically use journalistic language to demonstrate regime allegiance, advocate law and order, and position themselves as the voice of the people. Their intervention disrupts the existing dynamics of the mediated public sphere, which has long been dominated by professional journalism and liberal discourse.

CHINESE JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION (2022)

Article Political Science

To Repress or to Co-opt? Authoritarian Control in the Age of Digital Surveillance

Xu Xu

Summary: This article examines the impact of digital surveillance in dictatorships, suggesting that advancements in surveillance technologies lead to an increase in targeted repression and a decrease in universal redistribution, thereby making citizens worse off in dictatorships with improved government information.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE (2021)

Article Political Science

Repression Technology: Internet Accessibility and State Violence

Anita R. Gohdes

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE (2020)

Article Area Studies

United Front Work and Mechanisms of Countermobilization in Hong Kong

Edmund W. Cheng

CHINA JOURNAL (2020)

Article Political Science

THREE PAINFUL TRUTHS ABOUT SOCIAL MEDIA

Ronald J. Deibert

JOURNAL OF DEMOCRACY (2019)

Article Communication

Fragility of strong media effects in authoritarian environment (Evidence from Russia)

Nikita Savin et al.

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION (2018)

Article Area Studies

Authoritarian Participatory Persuasion 2.0: Netizens as Thought Work Collaborators in China

Maria Repnikova et al.

JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY CHINA (2018)

Article Political Science

Neither Repression Nor Concession? A Regime's Attrition against Mass Protests

Samson Yuen et al.

POLITICAL STUDIES (2017)

Article International Relations

What Terrorist Leaders Want: A Content Analysis of Terrorist Propaganda Videos

Max Abrahms et al.

STUDIES IN CONFLICT & TERRORISM (2017)

Article Political Science

How the Chinese Government Fabricates Social Media Posts for Strategic Distraction, Not Engaged Argument

Gary King et al.

AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW (2017)

Article Political Science

Online Social Media and Political Awareness in Authoritarian Regimes

Ora John Reuter et al.

BRITISH JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE (2015)

Article Political Science

Corrupting the Cyber-Commons: Social Media as a Tool of Autocratic Stability

Seva Gunitsky

PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS (2015)

Article Political Science

Social media and protest mobilization: evidence from the Tunisian revolution

Anita Breuer et al.

DEMOCRATIZATION (2015)

Article Political Science

EuroMaidan Protests in Ukraine: Social Media Versus Social Networks

Olga Onuch

PROBLEMS OF POST-COMMUNISM (2015)

Article Communication

Effects of celebrity involvement on young people's political and civic engagement

Nainan Wen et al.

CHINESE JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION (2014)

Article Political Science

China's Strategic Censorship

Peter Lorentzen

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE (2014)

Article Political Science

Authoritarianism Online: What Can We Learn from Internet Data in Nondemocracies?

Sheena Chestnut Greitens

PS-POLITICAL SCIENCE & POLITICS (2013)

Article Political Science

How Censorship in China Allows Government Criticism but Silences Collective Expression

Gary King et al.

AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW (2013)

Article Political Science

CHINA'S NETWORKED AUTHORITARIANISM

Rebecca MacKinnon

JOURNAL OF DEMOCRACY (2011)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

Three approaches to qualitative content analysis

HF Hsieh et al.

QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH (2005)