Query Result Set
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1300Hits:18720663Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

  Hide Options
Sort Order Items / Page
YANG, GUOBIN (9) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   095832


Brokering environment and health in China: issue entrepreneurs of the public sphere / Yang, Guobin   Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article identifies four types of issue entrepreneurs in the creation of public issues about the environment and health in China. They are media professionals, environmental and health NGOs, villagers, and netizens. Because of the different resources of issue entrepreneurs and the constraints of China's political context, politically safe and innocuous issues and issues of concern to the urban population are more likely to enter the public sphere. Contentious issues linked to the interests of powerful business and political actors may become publicized under extraordinary circumstances such as emergencies, disasters, or epidemics, suggesting that external shocks may have a galvanizing effect. Some environment-related health issues, such as pollution-related cancer, are high-stake issues. They often affect the most disadvantaged segments of the Chinese population, yet despite their gravity, their chances of entering the public sphere are small.
Key Words NGOs  Environment  Health  China  Public Sphere 
        Export Export
2
ID:   059507


Co-evolution of the internet and civil society in China / Yang, Guobin May-Jun 2003  Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication May-Jun 2003.
        Export Export
3
ID:   121207


Contesting food safety in the Chinese media: between hegemony and counter-hegemony / Yang, Guobin   Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Food safety is a matter of intense contestation in the Chinese media. Through three case studies, this article shows that government and corporate elites strive to maintain media hegemony while citizen-consumers and activists engage in counter-hegemonic practices. Under conditions of hegemony, citizen dissent is most likely to take one of two forms: diffused contention or radical protest. Like the yin and yang of civic dissent, these two forms are both the results of, and responses to, state and corporate hegemony.
Key Words Media  China  Internet  Food Safety  Weibo  Sanlu 
        Export Export
4
ID:   061671


Environmental NGOs and institutional dynamics in China / Yang, Guobin Mar 2005  Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication Mar 2005.
Key Words Environment  China-Environment  NGO-China 
        Export Export
5
ID:   076468


How do chinese civic associations respond to the internet? find / Yang, Guobin   Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2007.
        Export Export
6
ID:   130428


Internet activism & the party-state in China / Yang, Guobin   Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The history of Internet activism and Internet control in China is one of mutual adaptation between citizen activists and party authorities. The party-state initially reacted to Internet activism with alarm, but has since built a comprehensive approach combining repressive policing with gentler methods of social management. This approach has evolved in response to the diverse forms of and participants in Internet activism. But the adaptability of the Chinese Internet control regime does not mean that it will root out Internet activism. On the contrary, Internet activism will continue to grow and will itself adapt to the changing forms of control. Comparisons with Russia and the United States highlight how political economy, history, and everyday practice shape the forms of Internet activism and control.
        Export Export
7
ID:   079959


Media, civil society, and the rise of a green public sphere in / Yang, Guobin; Calhoun, Craig   Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract Direct citizen voices are relatively absent from China's public arena and seldom influence government policymaking. In early 2004, however, public controversies surrounding dam building on the Nu River prompted the Chinese government to halt the proposed hydropower project. The occurrence of such public debates indicates the rise of a green public sphere of critical environmental discourse. Environmental nongovernmental organizations play a central role in producing this critical discourse. Mass media, the internet, and "alternative media" are the main channels of communication. The emergence of a green public sphere demonstrates the new dynamism of grass-roots political change
Key Words Media  Civil Society  Environment  Internet  Green Public Sphere 
        Export Export
8
ID:   133727


Political contestation in Chinese digital spaces: deepening the / Yang, Guobin   Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Although research on the Chinese Internet is thriving, our understanding of its multidimensional character, its diverse forms, actors, and dynamics remains limited. This is due to a tendency to focus on technology at the expense of meaning and people, as well as a bias towards sweeping and dichotomous analytical categories, such as state vs. netizens, politics vs. entertainment, and authoritarianism vs. democracy. One of the perniciously appealing ways of sensationalizing the Chinese Internet falls under this either/or dichotomy. The seven contributions in this special issue of China Information challenge such binaries, thus deepening the critical inquiry into the multiple dimensions of the Chinese Internet. The authors show a more complex and nuanced picture of actors and contestation in Chinese digital spaces, as well as the symbolic forms and consequences of these contestations, illuminating new meanings of the political and new dimensions of digital contestation, including race, class and their interactions with the nation. Together, these articles exemplify an analytical orientation that I refer to as 'deep Internet studies'. They explore the Internet as a facet of a deep China by linking it to people's practical, perceptual, and moral experiences as well as to the contexts of institutions, politics, and policies.
        Export Export
9
ID:   121206


Pollution and protest in China: environmental mobilization in context / Deng, Yanhua; Yang, Guobin   Journal Article
Yang, Guobin Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article focuses on environmental controversy in a Chinese rural community. It shows that Chinese villagers may protest against anticipated pollution if the environmental threat is effectively framed. In the face of real and serious pollution, villagers may seek to redress environmental grievances by piggybacking on politically favourable issues. However, when the pollution is caused by fellow villagers, environmentally concerned villagers may remain silent owing to the constraints of community relations and economic dependency. These findings suggest that the relationship between pollution and protest is context-dependent.
        Export Export