Authoritarian Practices in the Digital Age| The Contestation and Shaping of Cyber Norms Through China’s Internet Sovereignty Agenda

Authors

  • Sarah McKune University of Toronto
  • Shazeda Ahmed UC Berkeley

Keywords:

Internet sovereignty, China, Russia, human rights, digital norms, legal norms, public opinion guidance, Shanghai Cooperation Organization, World Internet Conference

Abstract

This article focuses on China as the state dedicating the most coordinated, strategic, and consistent efforts to promoting an Internet sovereignty agenda at home and abroad. At its core, the Chinese case for Internet sovereignty envisions the regime’s absolute control over the digital experience of its population, with a focus on three dimensions: Internet governance, national defense, and internal influence. Through its guidance of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and creation of the World Internet Conference, normative collaborations with Russia and other states, and promotion of Internet sovereignty as benefiting developing states in particular, the Chinese government is advocating for global recognition of the norm over the long term. Yet growing international support for Internet sovereignty could undermine multistakeholderism, transparency, accountability, and human rights, sparking new flash points in ongoing contestation over digital norms.

Author Biographies

Sarah McKune, University of Toronto

Senior ResearcherThe Citizen Lab 2017

Shazeda Ahmed, UC Berkeley

PhD Student

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Published

2018-09-18

Issue

Section

Special Sections