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Social Science Computer Review
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Exploring Online Structures on Chinese Government Portals

Citizen Political Participation and Government Legitimation

Min Jiang

University of North Carolina-Charlotte, mjiang3{at}uncc.edu

Heng Xu

McKesson, xuh{at}purdue.edu

This article explores the communicative structures of Chinese government web sites and their implications for citizen political participation. Taking issue with the party-state's dubious claim of building a transparent, service-oriented, and democratic administration, the study analyzed web features on 31 Chinese provincial government portals. The UN's e-participation framework was adapted to locate venues for citizen involvement. The results suggest that by manipulating online structures, Chinese government resorts to more subtle forms of online social control through information delivery, agenda setting, and containment of public dissent. Limited improvement in administrative efficiency and transparency serves the dual role of deflating social tension and reestablishing party legitimacy. Paradoxically, citizens' political participation may generate unintended consequences of incremental reform of China's local governance and political institutions.

Key Words: China • government • democracy • control • participation • Internet • technology • web site • UN

This version was published on May 1, 2009

Social Science Computer Review, Vol. 27, No. 2, 174-195 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0894439308327313


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