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ID163249
Title ProperPopular threats and ntionalistic propaganda
Other Title InformationpoliticallLogic of China’s patriotic campaign
LanguageENG
AuthorMa, Xiao ;  Liu, Chuyu
Summary / Abstract (Note)Conventional wisdom suggests that authoritarian leaders use nationalist propaganda as a tool to strengthen mass support. Yet few studies have provided systematic evidence to account for specific tactics underlying these information manipulations. We argue that autocrats, recognizing the material costs of propaganda, are more likely to target localities with the greatest antiregime potential. Using a unique dataset of “patriotic education sites” that the Chinese Communist Party assigned throughout China as tools to advance its nationalistic campaign, we found a systematic association between these locations and the scale of antiregime mobilization in the 1989 prodemocracy movement. The longer the antiregime protest lasted in a city in 1989, the greater the number of patriotic education sites the city contains. Our findings highlight the strategic way in which autocrats manipulate nationalist propaganda to mitigate popular threats.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Studies vol. 27, 4, Dec-2018; p633-664
Journal SourceSecurity Studies Vol: 27 No 4
Key WordsPolitical Logic ;  Popular Threats ;  Nationalistic Propaganda ;  China’s Patriotic Campaign


 
 
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