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CREEMERS, ROGIER (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   139850


China’s constitutionalism debate: content, context and implications / Creemers, Rogier   Article
Creemers, Rogier Article
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Summary/Abstract In 2013, a debate on constitutionalism erupted between liberals advocating better implementation of China’s Constitution and anti-constitutionalist voices claiming that this would harm the political order and the reform project. The debate emerged against the background of a choppy political transition and proliferating social concerns, as well as hopeful expectations regarding the new leadership. However, the anti-constitutionalist position was closely aligned with the new Politburo Standing Committee’s agenda, which continues to reject the notion of a law-based political order and institutionalization of fundamental relationships between the Party, the state and citizens. This has significant implications for the direction of Chinese legal reforms and related scholarly understandings.
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2
ID:   151415


Cyber China: upgrading propaganda, public opinion work and social management for the twenty-first century / Creemers, Rogier   Journal Article
Creemers, Rogier Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The first two years of the Xi Jinping administration saw a thorough reconfiguration of Internet governance. This reconfiguration created a centralized and integrated institutional framework for information technologies, in support of an ambitious agenda to place digital technologies at the heart of propaganda, public opinion and social control work. Conversely, the autonomy and spontaneity of China’s online sphere was vastly reduced, as the leadership closed channels for public deliberation. This article reviews the institutional and regulatory changes that have taken place between 2012 and 2014, and analyses the methods and purposes of control they imply.
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3
ID:   114560


Marching in: China's cultural trade in official and press discourse / Creemers, Rogier   Journal Article
Creemers, Rogier Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This essay analyses the official and media response to the WTO cases related to cultural products, which China lost. It aims to contextualize both the official discourse and the press discourse in terms of domestic politics and China's trade priorities. It concludes that in the official discourse, China and the US are working at cross purposes, as they have fundamentally divergent concepts of trade in cultural products. The newspaper discourse is more moderate and emphasises developmental and commercial issues, but is also subject to the priorities of Chinese politics.
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4
ID:   142671


Pivot in Chinese cybergovernance: integrating internet control in Xi Jinping’s China / Creemers, Rogier   Article
Creemers, Rogier Article
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Summary/Abstract During the first two years of the Xi administration, a series of successive measures were taken to restructure the way that the Chinese Internet is governed. New institutions were created to centralise governance over a sphere that had hitherto been fragmented, while the pursuit of ideological and technological security led to greater efforts to control the circulation of online information and prevent harm, particularly originating from foreign threats. This paper analyses this process, and discusses implications for the future of the Chinese and global Internet.
Key Words Security  Media  Ideology  Political Reform  Internet Governance 
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