The Micro-foundations of Authoritarian Rule Unveiled by Digital Traces: New Theories and Methods with Applications to Chinese Social Media

dc.contributor.advisor

Manion, Melanie Frances

dc.contributor.author

Chen, Haohan

dc.date.accessioned

2020-02-10T17:27:44Z

dc.date.available

2021-01-10T09:17:12Z

dc.date.issued

2019

dc.department

Political Science

dc.description.abstract

How do citizens in authoritarian China talk about politics with one another in the social media era? Political talk is a social activity in authoritarian regimes as much as it is in democracies. However, the scholarship has so far dominantly focused on state-citizen interactions in political communication in authoritarian regimes, overlooking the dynamics of citizen-citizen interaction. In this dissertation, I present a new theory, original data, and two novel methods to understand social media political talk in authoritarian China. I argue that citizens in the social media era are engaged in a new form of preference falsification: expressing truthful political opinions to strangers outside their network while lying to “friends” in their network. I theorize that the behavior is attributable to a combination of psychological rewards for being truthful and social punishment for being a dissident. A consequence of the behavior, I posit, is discouragement of collective action, which stabilizes authoritarian rules. I test the theory with an original dataset I collected from Chinese social media. In addition, I develop two novel methods to analyze big social media data of political communication in authoritarian China and beyond. I develop ATIOS, a system based on distributed semantics that generates valid and replicable text-as-data measurement. I introduce Bayesian Dynamic Network Modeling, a method that efficiently models time series of social media networks. With this dissertation, I contribute new theories and methods for the study of contemporary Chinese politics and comparative political behavior.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20098

dc.subject

Political science

dc.title

The Micro-foundations of Authoritarian Rule Unveiled by Digital Traces: New Theories and Methods with Applications to Chinese Social Media

dc.type

Dissertation

duke.embargo.months

10.98082191780822

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Chen_duke_0066D_15397.pdf
Size:
3.17 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

Collections