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  • Google and “Chinese norms”

    Posted on January 13th, 2010 Jack 3 comments Print This Post Print This Post

    Reporting on Google’s response to a Chinese government attack on Gmail-using democracy activists, the New York Times reported:

    It is also likely to enrage the Chinese authorities, who deny that they censor the Internet and are accustomed to having major foreign companies adapt their practices to Chinese norms.

    Sorry, but censorship is not a “Chinese norm.” It is a strategy that authoritarian regimes deliberately use to impede collective action for political change. The slippery use of “norm” smacks of a common problem in sloppy cultural argumentation. Sure, culture matters. Culture is useful, for example, when categorizing actors’ exogenous preferences without time to probe them more deeply. Sometimes culture manifests as a norm, or an ‘informal’ rule of interaction (i.e. an institution). Used in this way, “norm” implies that the rule is highly particular – that it has characteristics identifying it with one or another society. But, in China, we are dealing with neither culture nor norm. Plenty of actors in plenty of societies have used censorship and control: President Tandja in Niger, Stalin in Russia, and Woodrow Wilson in our own country.

    Hats off to Google for dumping its search query censorship, which the company began in 2006 to curry business favor with the regime. (H/T to the UN Wire.)

     

    3 responses to to “Google and “Chinese norms””

    1. Nice post, Jack…reminds me of the BS that Lee Yuan Kew trotted out to justify his regime (does it still?).

    2. It also reminds of the Kupchan/Mount article urging us to accept other “political cultures” like China’s. http://www.democracyjournal.org/article.php?ID=6680

    3. This is a good time to refer readers to Barak Hoffman’s most recent post on the China-Google affair.

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