Social Media and Collective Action in China

Bei Qin, David Stromberg, Yanhui Wu

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper studies how social media affects the dynamics of protests and strikes in China during 2009–2017. Based on 13.2 billion microblog posts, we use tweets and retweets to measure social media communication across cities and exploit its rapid expansion for identification. We find that, despite strict government censorship, Chi- nese social media has a sizeable effect on the geographical spread of protests and strikes. Furthermore, social media communication considerably expands the scope of protests by spreading events across different causes (e.g., from anticorruption protests to environmental protests) and dramatically increases the probability of far-reaching protest waves with simultaneous events occurring in many cities. These effects arise even though Chinese social media barely circulates content that explicitly helps organize protests.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1993-2026
Number of pages34
JournalEconometrica
Volume92
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

User-Defined Keywords

  • China
  • Social media
  • Media control
  • Protests
  • Strikes

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