Abstract 1
Contents 4
Illustrations 10
Tables 10
Figures 14
Acknowledgements 14
Chapter 1: Introduction 17
1.1 Introduction 17
1.2 Aim, objectives, and rationale of the research 17
1.3 Research background 20
1.4 Limitations of existing literature 22
1.5 The structure of the thesis 27
Chapter 2: Literature review 32
2.1 Introduction 32
2.2 Democracy and democratisation 32
2.2.1 Democratisation and favourable conditions 33
2.2.2 Democracy and its people 34
2.2.3 Political culture 36
2.2.4 Free markets, capitalism, and economic growth 37
2.2.5 Strong civil society and public sphere 40
2.2.6 Political participation and disengagement 48
2.2.7 The role of mass media 51
2.3 China’s political tradition 53
2.3.1 Dominant political ideas 53
2.3.2 Persistence of authoritarian regimes 58
2.4 Contemporary China in the process of democratisation 59
2.4.1 Economic reform and opening-up policy 62
2.4.2 Political reform 67
2.4.3 Standard of living, urbanisation, education and media exposure 70
2.5 The development of the Internet in China 77
Chapter 3: Methodology 82
3.1 Introduction 82
3.2 Grounded theory 82
3.3 Research design 84
3.4 The population: university students 85
3.4.1 Student protest and social movements in Modern China 86
3.4.2 University students and Internet use 86
3.5 Data collection 87
3.5.1 In-depth interviews 87
3.5.2 Focus group research 96
3.5.3 Web content analysis, digital auto-ethnography, and literature review 108
3.6 Data analysis 109
3.6.1 Four coding phrases 109
3.6.2 Emerged categories 113
3.6.3 The participants 116
3.6.4 Other media use 120
Chapter 4: Participants’ Internet use 122
4.1 Introduction 122
4.2 Internet use habit and online activities 122
4.3 Online news reading, information search, and lecture 127
4.3.1 Online news reading 127
4.3.2 Online information search 142
4.3.3 Online lecture 148
4.4 Between acquaintances and strangers 149
4.4.1 QQ 149
4.4.2 Renren 160
4.4.3 Weibo (Microblog) 163
4.4.4 Between acquaintances and strangers 183
4.5 University intranet and online forums 187
4.5.1 University Intranet 187
4.5.2 Online forums 194
4.6 Online and offline political participation, participation, and volunteering 200
4.7 Online travelling and movies 205
4.7.1 Online travelling 205
4.7.2 Online movies 208
4.8 Climbing over the Great Wall, Twitter, and Facebook 210
4.8.1 Climbing over the Great Wall 210
4.8.2 Twitter and Facebook 213
4.9 Participant as a communicator 214
4.10 Civic talk 223
Chapter 5: Participants’ perceptions of the Internet 228
5.1 Introduction 228
5.2 Belief in the Internet’s effect 228
5.2.1 The Internet’s effect on Chinese society 229
5.2.2 Individual’s effect through the Internet 245
5.2.3 The Internet’s effect on individuals 247
5.3 Understanding of online comments and user-generated content 256
5.4 Disbelief in relevance of social problems 259
5.5 Understanding of censorship 262
5.6 Attitude toward government corruption 268
Chapter 6: Discussion 270
6.1 Introduction 270
6.2 Political disengagement and why 271
6.2.1 Introduction 271
6.2.2 Political disengagement 271
6.2.3 Censorship 273
6.2.4 Political socialisation and irrelevance 276
6.2.5 Belief in a shock therapy and low political efficacy 280
6.2.6 Lack of civic organisations and activities 282
6.3 The power of disengagement and mass entertainment 283
6.3.1 Introduction 283
6.3.2 Who communicates to the participants online 284
6.3.3 The power of political disengagement and mass entertainment 287
6.3.4 Control or liberation: Huxley vs. the gadget theory 294
6.4 How do participants understand the influence of Internet use on them? 297
6.4.1 Introduction 297
6.4.2 Why Internet users? 297
6.4.3 The Internet and better-informed citizens 299
6.4.4 Strangers and internal political efficacy 301
6.4.5 Belief in ‘We’ effect and external political efficacy 303
6.4.6 Summary 304
6.5 Climbing over the Great Wall: liberalised Internet, liberalised China? 305
6.5.1 Introduction 305
6.5.2 Lack of motivation: an obstacle to a liberalised Internet 306
6.5.3 Liberalised Internet, same perspective 308
6.5.4 Liberalised Internet, more active political engagement? 308
6.6 Beyond the Internet and beyond politics: civic talk and civil society? 310
6.6.1 Introduction 310
6.6.2 Civic talk beyond the Internet 310
6.6.3 The rise of online civil society 310
Chapter 7: Conclusions 317
7.1 Introduction 317
7.2 Reflective summaries 317
7.3 Scope and limitations of the research 323
7.4 Contributions of the research 325
7.5 Further research 329
Appendices 333
Appendix I: Interview Guide for In-Depth Interview 333
Appendix II: Informed Consent Form Template for In-Depth Interviews 342
Appendix III: An interview invitation letter 348
Appendix IV: Informed Consent Form Template for Focus Group 350
Appendix V: The researcher as an instrument 356
Appendix VI: Youg’s Internet Addiction Test 359
Appendix VII: Other Internet use 360
Bibliography 365
Table 1. Comparison between rate of population age 6 and over by educational level 72
Table 2. Statistics of Chinese overseas students from 1978 to 2009 72
Table 3. Features of focus group participants 102
Table 4. Categories emerged from the focused coding 114
Table 5. Who are the participants? 116
Table 6. Online skills 117
Table 7. Participants’ online skills? 117
Table 8. How did the participants describe themselves? 118
Table 9. Other media use 120
Table 10. Interne use habit I 122
Table 11. Internet use habit II 124
Table 12. The participants’ online activities 126
Table 13. News reading: channel and frequency 129
Table 14. Online news reading: reading habit 132
Table 15. Online news reading: what do I read? 135
Table 16. Online news reading: how do I understand news? 138
Table 17. Online news reading: why do I read news? 140
Table 18. Online information search: channel and message 143
Table 19. Online information search: search habit 145
Table 20. Online lecture 148
Table 21. QQ contacts: number, categories and frequent contacts 150
Table 22. QQ contacts: message 152
Table 23. QQ contacts: habit 153
Table 24. QQ groups: number, categories and active groups 154
Table 25. QQ groups: what they do or do not communicate 156
Table 26. QQ groups: habit 157
Table 27. QQ groups: participant as an organiser of QQ groups 158
Table 28. Qzone: who and message 158
Table 29. Qzone: frequency and habit 159
Table 30. Renren: friends and frequency 161
Table 31. Renren: what do they communicate? 162
Table 32. Weibo: service provider, anonymity, frequency and number of followers 165
Table 33. Weibo: who do I follow? 166
Table 34. Weibo: why do I follow? 175
Table 35. Weibo: what do I follow and how? 176
Table 36. Weibo: tweet and comment 177
Table 37. Weibo: what do I retweet? 180
Table 38. Weibo: who follows me? 181
Table 39. Weibo: why do I retweet? 182
Table 40. Weibo: who do I interact or converse with? 182
Table 41. Between acquaintances and strangers: channel 183
Table 42. Between acquaintances and strangers: communication and interaction 184
Table 43. Between acquaintances and strangers: development of relationship 186
Table 44. University Intranet: participants as audience 188
Table 45. University Intranet: participants as communicators 193
Table 46. Online forum: topic, purpose and participant’s contribution 196
Table 47. Online forum: topic, number, and effect 198
Table 48. Report problems or make suggestion to government online 200
Table 49. Participation in political activities or organisations through the Internet 201
Table 50. Participation in the local people’s congress election (supposed) 202
Table 51. Online participation 203
Table 52. Online volunteering 204
Table 53. Offline volunteering and participation 205
Table 54. Online travelling 206
Table 55. Online movies:channel, content and frequency 208
Table 56. Online movies: habit and effect 209
Table 57. Climbing over the Great Wall I 210
Table 58. Climbing over the Great Wall II 212
Table 59. Twitter 213
Table 60. Facebook 214
Table 61. Participant as a communicator: why 214
Table 62. Reasons for silence: censorship 215
Table 63. Reasons for silence: lack of motivation 217
Table 64. Reasons for silence: lack of experience or expertise and lack of trust 217
Table 65. Reasons for silence: personality and online labelling 218
Table 66. Participant as a communicator: channel, message and frequency 219
Table 67. Civic talk: channel, deliberator and message 224
Table 68. Civic talk: Role of the participant and frequency 225
Table 69. The Internet’s effect in general: what it affects 229
Table 70. How it affects: the properties of the Internet 233
Table 71. How Internet affects: media exposure and government 234
Table 72. How Internet affects: public opinion and concern 235
Table 73. How Internet affects: opinion leaders and extreme comments 239
Table 74. How it affects: doubt about the current system 240
Table 75. How it affects: gradual effect 240
Table 76. The Internet’s effect in general: what it does not affect 241
Table 77. What contributes to limited political influence of the Internet: the government 242
Table 78. What contributes to limited influence of the Internet: the public 243
Table 79. What contributes to limited influence of the Internet: pioneers 244
Table 80. What contributes to limited influence of the Internet: environment 245
Table 81. The participants’ belief of their influence through the Internet 245
Table 82. Internet’s effect on participants’ view 247
Table 83. Internet’s effect on participants’ behaviour 251
Table 84. Internet’s effect on participants’ attitude 254
Table 85. Understanding of online comments and user-generated content I 256
Table 86. Understanding of online comments and user-generated content II 257
Table 87. Participants’ belief in irrelevance of social problems 260
Table 88. Belief in moral high ground or self-discipline 261
Table 89. Lack of ethics of animal research and product 261
Table 90. Understanding of censorship: influence of censorship on the participant 262
Table 91. Understanding of censorship: attitude to censorship 264
Table 92. Understanding of censorship: what is censored? 266
Table 93. Understanding of censorship: privacy concern 267
Table 94. Attitude toward government corruption 268
Table 95. Online shopping: channel, window shopping, buying and selling 361
Table 96. Online shopping: communication and networking, and understanding 362
Table 97. Online music 363
Table 98. Online games 363
Table 99. Downloading 364
Table 100. Online novels 364
Table 101. Online literature 364
Table 102. Online magazines 365
Table 103. Email 365