In the Shadow of State Power: Citizenship Rights, Civil Society, and Media Representation in China, 2000–2012

Authors

  • Stephanie Na Liu College of Literature and Journalism, Sichuan University
  • Tsan-Kuo Chang Institute of Communication Studies, National Chiao Tung University

Keywords:

citizenship rights, state power, civil society, coexistence, social power

Abstract

Using citizenship rights as the locus of research, this study examines the coexistence between the state and civil society in China by focusing on how the party and market media represented the issue between 2000 and 2012. Media representation of citizenship rights was scrutinized in connection to Internet development, economic growth, status of social conflict, and expansion of civil society organizations. Both comparative content analysis and extramedia data analysis show that the party newspaper incorporated citizenship rights into the political and economic arenas, conforming to the logic of performance legitimacy of the party-state. The market newspaper contextualized rights issues mainly in the field of civil society and correlated with status of social conflict and inequality. As such, there was a dialogical and contextual coexistence between the state and the civil society in China.

Author Biographies

Stephanie Na Liu, College of Literature and Journalism, Sichuan University

Dr. Stephanie Na Liu is Lecturer in the College of Literature and Journalism at Sichuan University, China. Her research interests lie in media and citizenship rights, new media events, political communication, and international communication. [Email: naliu33@gmail.com]

Tsan-Kuo Chang, Institute of Communication Studies, National Chiao Tung University

Prof. Tsan-Kuo Chang is currently Visiting Professor at the Institute of Communication Studies, National Chiao Tung University. His research interests are sociology of news, media and globalization, cyberspace and international communication, comparative research, and mass media and foreign policy.

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Published

2019-03-28

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Section

Articles