IN-EAST News
20.09.2019 - 09:45
China: Changing the Norms of Internet
IN-EAST Master student Andrew Devine publishes analysis of China's strategy in changing the norms of global Internet governance in POLITIKON
The revised paper is based on a paper presented in an Advanced East Asian Studies Seminar of Prof. Nele Noesselt.
Andrew Devine: Contesting the Digital World Order. China’s National Role Strategy in Changing the Norms of Global internet Governance. In: Politikon: The IAPSS Journal of Political Science, 42, 61–79.
Internet: https://doi.org/10.22151/politikon.42.3 , 2019
Abstract
This article aims to understand China’s national role conceptions and strategy within the context of the World Internet Conference (WIC). The Chinese government uses this conference to promote its model of internet governance known as cyber sovereignty. The foreign policy behaviour of China (role performance) as well as role prescriptions from the US are also analysed. A novel approach based on frame analysis is taken to uncover China’s national role conceptions. The related frames in this article are then categorized into national roles. China performs four national roles as part of its strategy to reshape international internet governance norms: developer, global village member, global leader, and law-abiding citizen. This article concludes that the national roles in the WIC are aimed at developing and emerging countries in order to increase China’s power and win gradual support for the cyber sovereignty model.