SCMP: The Net will follow, not lead, China's reforms
SHANTHI KALATHIL and TAYLOR BOAS
Beijing prevented access to the Internet's Google search engine in the
autumn, and now access to some online journals is being blocked. Such
interruptions are part of the complex way the authorities are using policy and
technology to attempt to guide the development of the Internet, our commentators
write. Most followers of international affairs are now familiar with assertions about
the potential of the Internet to change China drastically. Access has grown
exponentially since the country's first connection to the Internet in 1993.
Domains and Web sites have proliferated, while growing millions access the
Internet from personal computers at home and the office. In major cities,
Internet cafes host a generation accustomed more to mobile phones and
consumerism than to communist dogma. Chinese Internet companies seek and attain listings on US stock markets, and
foreign investors hail China's entry to the World Trade Organisation. Beijing's
municipal government boasts a Web site where citizens can e-mail their mayor
with grievances. [...]
Yet, tugging at the rhetoric is another reality. China's own information
space is restricted by regulations inherited from pre-reform years. Its
expansion is driven by five-year plans. Even as the so-called wired elite
mushrooms and gains influence, growing numbers are arrested for expressing
anti-government views online. Falun Gong followers who use the Internet to spread information are sent to
re-education camps. Meanwhile, millions outside China's urban centres still lack
telephones, much less Internet access. Clearly, the hype over China's experience with the Internet belies a far more
complicated scenario, one that does not lend itself easily to pat
characterisations of political impact. A number of international observers have
suggested that the technology poses a potent threat to China's political system,
that a tide of forbidden images and ideas will simply sweep away half a century
of outmoded thinking. Others believe that the Internet will become a tool of the
Chinese regime, which will use increasingly powerful monitoring and surveillance
technologies to stay one step ahead of the democracy-seeking masses. The truth is considerably more complex than either extreme. Even as competing
sources of information broaden the public sphere of debate, the Chinese
government has pursued a number of measures - from blocking Web sites to more
punitive deterrents - designed to shape the physical and symbolic environments
in which Internet use takes place. The state is also vigorously encouraging
Internet-driven development, harnessing the Internet for specific political and
economic aims. China has sought to use information technology, in particular the Internet, to
address such high-level issues as corruption, transparency, local government
reform and the development of poor areas. It has incorporated concepts of
information-age warfare into its rethinking of military affairs. China has also
looked abroad for guidance on how to balance the promotion of information
technology with authoritarian political control. Through measures ranging from blunt punitive actions to the subtle manipulation
of the private sector, the Chinese state has been largely successful to date in
guiding the broad political impact of Internet use. This should not be confused
with overt central control over every facet of the Internet. Many analysts accurately note that the Chinese state is increasingly fragmented
and unable to monitor the Internet in its entirety; that bureaucratic battles
plague the medium's development; and that access to forbidden information has
become much easier as the technology has spread. While valid, these points do not necessarily challenge the assertion that the
state is effectively controlling the over-arching political impact of the
Internet. In the realm of civil society, the central government has largely been able to
shape the environment in which Internet use takes place. It does this mainly by
encouraging a level of self-censorship that still allows access to a plethora of
information on the Internet. By offering some pre-emptive liberalisation, the
government may also head off more serious challenges in the future. In the economic arena, the government has shown that its ability to impose
dictates on domestic and foreign companies extends well into the Internet
sector, despite a proliferation of private companies that provide access and
content to the public. At the same time, the government is harnessing the
Internet to strengthen the state through anti-corruption and e-government
measures. It is also using the Internet to influence global perceptions of China
and its policies. This is not to say that the government's ability to manipulate the political
implications of Internet use is perfectly sustainable over the long term. The
realm of public use features a growing potential for political impact. One Internet entrepreneur has predicted that in five years China will have 300
million Internet devices, including cell phones and computers. Although such
estimates may be high, it is true that Internet access will continue to expand
considerably, with the state's blessing, in the coming years. By wholeheartedly
endorsing a market-led model of Internet development and by
encouraging mass access, the state faces the increased probability of political
challenges stemming from Internet use. In fact, much of the Internet use most challenging to the state has taken place
during times of crisis, such as the incident in April 2001 when a US navy spy
plane collided with a PLA jet fighter. Heated anti-American sentiment, which
reached a crescendo after the terrorist attack on America, still simmers in many
Web forums. As analyst Nina Hachigian argues, during a crisis, the Internet may refocus
national discontent in unprecedented ways. An unforeseen international incident,
for instance, might precipitate a groundswell of public discontent that could
mesh online with overseas Chinese nationalist sentiment, creating a potent
challenge to the regime. In such an instance, the Chinese authorities appear to have two choices:
responding harshly, setting off a chain of repercussions, or shifting to a more
hardline foreign policy in order to accommodate an increasingly agitated
populace. The increasing openness and competition promoted by China's entry to the World
Trade Organisation may also shape the Internet's political impact. As China's
transition to a market economy encourages bureaucracies to fight for lucrative
pieces of turf, the Internet has proved to be an irresistible lure. But such
battles do not facilitate effective centralised co-ordination and supervision.
This presents one of the biggest challenges to the Chinese government: ensuring
that Internet development takes place according to centrally crafted timetables
and blueprints. In essence, the Internet's development in China is taking place against a highly
fluid backdrop. Various forms of Internet use may erode authoritarian control in
a number of ways. The public use of the medium, especially as it evolves, may prove to be, if not
a catalyst, then a point of inflection along the road to concrete political
change. Yet this change may not necessarily be of a democratic nature. Should popular nationalistic sentiment coalesce on the Internet into significant
opposition movement, the consequences may not bode well for stability or
liberalisation. The idea of a wired populace spontaneously pressing for
democracy tends to appeal to Western policymakers. Yet Internet use that
strengthens state capacity may contribute more to long-term liberalisation than
Internet use that weakens the state in certain areas. Current e-government
measures designed to increase transparency and promote efficiency may in fact
gird the capacity of state institutions to weather a future political
transition. On its own, Internet use is unlikely to bring in a new political age in China.
Concrete political change is likely to depend on several slow, incremental
steps, many of which may have no connection to the Internet. At the same time,
it is possible that Internet use may set the stage for
gradual liberalisation, facilitating a future transition from authoritarian
rule. All told, the Internet is likely to contribute to change within China
without precipitating the state's collapse. Excerpted from the book, Open Networks, Closed Regimes: The Impact of the
Internet on Authoritarian Rule by Shanthi Kalathil and Taylor C. Boas, published
by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, www.ceip.org. Reprinted by
permission of the publisher
SCMP (South China Morning Post) is a prominent Hong Kong-based
English-language newspaper
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