Research Catalog

You've got dissent! : Chinese dissident use of the Internet and Beijing's counter-strategies / Michael Chase, James Mulvenon.

Title
You've got dissent! : Chinese dissident use of the Internet and Beijing's counter-strategies / Michael Chase, James Mulvenon.
Author
Chase, Michael.
Publication
Santa Monica, CA : Rand, 2002.

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TextRequest in advance AS36 .R4 MR-1543Off-site

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Details

Additional Authors
  • Mulvenon, James C., 1970-
  • Center for Asia-Pacific Policy (Rand Corporation)
  • Rand Corporation. National Security Research Division.
Description
xviii, 114 p.; 23 cm.
Summary
"This report analyzes the political use of the Internet by Chinese dissidents, Falungong practitioners, Tibetan activists, and other groups and individuals in the PRC and abroad who are regarded as subversive by the authorities in China. It also examines the counterstrategies that Beijing has employed to prevent or minimize the political impact of such use of the Internet. By permitting the global dissemination of information with greater ease and rapidity than ever before, the Internet enables small groups of activists, and even individuals, to exercise influence disproportionate to their limited manpower and financial resources. In its counterstrategies, the PRC regime has made some use of high-tech solutions, and there is some evidence that Beijing¹s technical countermeasures are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Its approach, however, is predominantly "low-tech Leninist," employing traditional measures such as surveillance, informants, searches, and confiscation of computer equipment. Beijing's countermeasures have been relatively successful to date. No credible challenges to the regime exist despite the introduction of massive amounts of modern telecommunications infrastructure. However, the scale of China's information-technology modernization suggests that time may be on the side of the regime's opponents."--Rand abstracts.
Subject
  • Internet > Government policy > China
  • Internet > China
  • Dissenters > China
  • Civil rights > China
  • China > Politics and government > 1976-2002
Note
  • "MR-1543."
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references.
Additional Formats (note)
  • Also available in PDF format on the Rand Web site.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
Ch. 1. Political use of the Internet in China -- Introduction -- The State of the Internet in China -- The State of Unsanctioned NGOs Inside China -- Falungong -- The China Democracy Party -- The Tibetan Exile Community -- Use of the Internet -- Two-Way Communication -- One-Way Communication -- Measuring Success -- Future Trends -- Ch. 2. Government Counterstrategies -- Beijing's Dilemma: Control versus Modernization -- The Nature of the Chinese Information Security Environment -- Counterstrategies -- Low-Tech Solutions for High-Tech Problems -- High-Tech Solutions for High-Tech Problems -- Measuring Success -- Future Trends -- App. Dissident Web Sites.
ISBN
0833031791
LCCN
^^2002069720
OCLC
  • 49704566
  • SCSB-10414988
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library