Seminar Series | “Speaking with the State’s Voice: The Decade-Long Growth of Government-Authored News Media in China under Xi Jinping”

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Sterling Hall, conference room 1328
@ 12:30 pm - 1:45 pm
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Brandon Stewart of Princeton University will present as part of the Seminar Series.


About Brandon Stewart

Brandon Stewart is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Princeton University where he develops new quantitative statistical methods for applications across the social sciences.

About the presentation

The presentation is based on this paper.

Autocratic governments around the world use clandestine propaganda campaigns to influence the media. We document a decade-long trend in China towards the planting of government-authored articles in party and commercial newspapers. To examine this phenomenon, we develop a new approach to identifying scripted propagandaˆ—the coerced reprinting of lightly-adapted government-authored articles in newspapers—that leverages the footprints left by the government when making media interventions. We show that in China, scripted propaganda is a daily phenomenon-—on 90% of days from 2012-2022, the vast majority of party newspapers include at least some scripted propaganda at the direction of a central directive. On particular sensitive days, the amount of scripted propaganda can spike to 30% of the articles appearing in major newspapers. We show that scripted propaganda has strengthened under President Xi Jinping. In the last decade the front page of party newspapers has evolved from 5% scripted articles to nearly 20% scripted. This government-authored content throughout the paper is increasingly homogeneous—fewer and fewer adaptations are done by individual newspapers. In contrast to popular speculation, we show that scripted content is not only on ideological topics (although it is increasingly ideological) and is also very prevalent in commercial papers. Using a case study of domestic coverage of COVID-19, we demonstrate how the regime uses scripting to shape, constrain, and delay information during crises. Our findings reveal the wide-ranging influence of government-authored propaganda in the Chinese media ecosystem. Joint work with Hannah Waight, Yin Yuan and Margaret E. Roberts.

Organizer

La Follette School of Public Affairs, Models, Experiments, and Data workshop

Contact

Héctor Pifarré i Arolas, hparolas@lafollette.wisc.edu