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China's Internet Governance: A New Conceptualization of the Cyber-Sovereignty Model
Date
2019-04-09
Author
Advisors
Munger, Michael
Mickiewicz, Ellen
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Abstract
In recent years, China’s Internet governance regime has been subject to increasing
literature scrutiny and attention. A rising superpower, China’s vision for the Internet
on domestic and international stages has far-reaching implications for the future
cyber world order. While traditional theories of governance typically categorize China
as a cyber-sovereign nation, I argue that China’s approach is more nuanced and can
better be considered under a “flexible” cyber-sovereignty model. Through both a historical
and case-study analysis, I suggest that this new model for China better considers
the effects of new, rising capital forces—Chinese internet corporations—and explains
the dynamic mix of rejection and assimilation into the existing regime that characterizes
China’s current Internet governance strategy. Ultimately, this new model can help
us conceptualize China’s vision and strategy for Internet governance, which can have
far-ranging implications for the future of cyberspace and the Internet as we know
it.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
Political SciencePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/18308Citation
Zhang, Qiang (2019). China's Internet Governance: A New Conceptualization of the Cyber-Sovereignty Model.
Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/18308.Collections
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