Sunday, 4 August 2013

In China, Communist Party takes unprecedented step: It is listening

In China, Communist Party takes unprecedented step: It is listening


STR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES - Protesters carrying a banner saying "give the victims truth" demontrate in the hope of learing the truth of the July 23 high-speed train collision, at a railway station in Wenzhou, in eastern China's Zhejiang province on July 27, 2011.

In the offices of China’s Communist Party newspaper, rows of analysts sit at computer screens poring over data that is stripped off the Internet.
Every comment made by the 591 million Chinese “netizens” is analyzed at the People’s Daily Online Public Opinion Monitoring Center, with summaries sent in real time to party leaders.
Graphic
Internet use around the world
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Internet use around the world

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More than ever before, China’s rulers are actually listening to their people, reacting quickly to contain potential crises that could threaten one-party control.With its ability to control the Internet increasingly challenged,China’s Communist party has had to change its game.
Thepractice of collecting information on its citizens is as old as China itself: The nation’s first emperor, Qin Shi Huang, maintained a massive network of spies. The Communist Party’s own journalists have long funneled to party leaders classified reports on what is really happening at ground level.
But now, the government is trying to understand public opinion on an unprecedented scale. In response to government demand, opinion monitoring centers have sprung up in state-run news organizations and universities to mine and interpret the vast rivers of chatter on the Internet. At the same time, the authorities are hiring firms to poll people about everything from traffic management to tax policy.
“The government used to have more power to control the agenda,” said a professor at Renmin University in Beijing, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of restrictions on talking to foreign reporters. “But now there is a new approach, to identify the hot spots and try to control the crisis.”
The idea of actually listening to the opinions of the Chinese people is a radical departure for a Communist dictatorship more used to persecuting ordinary citizens for their criticism. But the country’s new president, Xi Jinping, warned in June that “winning or losing public support” could decide the party’s “survival or extinction,” according to state-run news agency Xinhua.
Increasingly, public opposition to a proposal can shape policy, although not yet on issues vital to the party’s interests, such as political reform.
Last month, for example, a woman won compensation for being unjustly imprisoned in a labor camp after her cause was taken up online. Her crime had been to demand punishment for officials she accused of raping her daughter.
Several construction projects have stalled in the face of opposition from netizens: plans for an aluminium processing plant in southern China were canceled last month after street protests and online outrage.
Netizens have also played a role in exposing official corruption, and experts count more than 170 party officials who have been prosecuted as a result of being exposed online.
Hiring private polling firms
Every government department, at the central and provincial level, has units devoted to public opinion research. But they tend to function very imperfectly, to produce reports that “justify what my boss is talking about, that it is the right thing,” said Victor Yuan Yue, chairman of Horizon Research Consultancy Group.       WASHINGTON POST

1 comment:

  1. δείχνει οτι η Κινα εχει ανοιχτό μάτι στα πολιτικά δημοκρατικά συστήματα του κόσμου.

    ReplyDelete