Mark Leonard, Britain’s pre-eminent analyst of modern China, says the Olympic genie is out of the bottle. The prospect of global scrutiny has actually increased repression as the authorities try to stamp out dissent. But digital technology is impossible to police
The outside world tends to talk about how revolutionary economic reforms have gone hand in hand with political stagnation. But the Olympics shows that China has modernised its politics as much as its economy — just not in the direction of liberal democracy. The state has largely withdrawn from people’s everyday lives, giving Chinese citizens unprecedented freedoms to consume and organise their professional and personal development. But this growing freedom in the personal realm has been matched with an increasingly sophisticated control of the public sphere. In the 1980s, many Chinese intellectuals supported multi-party elections and the separation of the party from the government. But since Tiananmen, political reform has taken on a new meaning. While there are still prominent thinkers — such as the political scientist Yu Keping — who believe in the country’s incremental embrace of democracy, many modern intellectuals argue that China would be better to avoid elections altogether and instead focus on introducing the rule of law while making the one-party state more responsive. The last few years have seen the party use opinion polls, focus groups and public consultations to put the one-party state in touch with public opinion. What is emerging is not Western-style democracy, but a high-tech model of ‘deliberative dictatorship’ that has increased the legitimacy of the one-party state, and lessened calls for genuine democracy.
But though the Olympics will strengthen the Beijing government’s standing at home, it is likely to weaken it abroad. Maybe the big story of the 2008 Olympics will not be of Beijing’s ‘Big Brother’ watching its citizens, but rather the story of thousands of journalists and fans watching Big Brother, and recording its every move on mobile phones, cameras and blog-posts. In an interesting new book, Owning the Olympics: Narratives of the New China, the academics Monroe Price and Daniel Dayan claim that the development of new technologies such as digital cameras and the internet site YouTube could turn the surveillance society against itself. In the past, we have defined surveillance as the powerful monitoring the powerless; the use of information technology by state institutions to monitor individuals. But increasingly, the availability of new technology allows individuals to monitor the state institutions themselves. The authors use the phrase ‘sousveillance’ — French for monitoring from below — to capture a new phenomenon where the powerful can be filmed and held to account for their actions in the court of public opinion. Sousveillance famously made an appearance with the beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles, the hanging of Saddam Hussein in 2006 and the protests in Burma in 2007. But the Beijing Olympics could take this to an industrial scale. The Beijing authorities could see all their painstaking attempts to show a kinder, gentler image to the world overturned by some rogue footage of an overzealous security official responding to protesters captured on a mobile phone or digital camera.
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Water
July 17th, 2008 10:21am Report this commentAn interesting article ahh, but I must really get away from this blasted computer.
T.O. Varich
July 17th, 2008 2:03pm Report this comment"an American Renaissance under President Obama" - an example of the famous English irony, no?
Chris
July 17th, 2008 7:27pm Report this commentJust another reminder of how rancid the whole olympic process is. Nobody with any moral fibre could take part in this - and all so a few drug fuelled plonkers can run round in circles.
Nicholas Storey
July 17th, 2008 11:34pm Report this commentThey bid for the games. They paid the piper - and now they and all the world - will hear his tune.
Kirk, Homewood ,IL USA
July 19th, 2008 12:11am Report this comment"an American Renaissance under President Obama"- believe me, in this case, the clothes have no emperor.
signed,
a resident of barackistan (formerly, Illinois)
LuckyBarker
July 22nd, 2008 11:09am Report this comment"Big Brother"... :)
This is about USA... ;)
Tapping phones, perlustration, daily propaganda, institutionalized torture, murder of Afghan and Iraqi civilians and other abomination...
Orwell wrote about the USA and described such propagation as in this clause ;)
fromRussiaWithLove
July 22nd, 2008 12:31pm Report this commentShanghai Co-operation Organisation — an alliance of autocrats which Beijing and Moscow ?
What next? UN terrorist organization?
jade louise lambeth
July 24th, 2008 2:42pm Report this commentbb defo!!!!
jade lambeth
November 6th, 2008 10:40am Report this commentbig brother 4 lyf!!!!!!!!!
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