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Authoritarian Propaganda Campaigns on Foreign Affairs: Four Birds, One Stone, and the South China Sea Arbitration

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Authoritarian Propaganda Campaigns on Foreign Affairs: Four Birds, One Stone, and the South China Sea Arbitration. / Chubb, Andrew; Wang, Frances Yaping.
In: International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 67, No. 3, 30.09.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Chubb A, Wang FY. Authoritarian Propaganda Campaigns on Foreign Affairs: Four Birds, One Stone, and the South China Sea Arbitration. International Studies Quarterly. 2023 Sept 30;67(3). Epub 2023 Jul 8. doi: 10.1093/isq/sqad047

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Chubb, Andrew ; Wang, Frances Yaping. / Authoritarian Propaganda Campaigns on Foreign Affairs : Four Birds, One Stone, and the South China Sea Arbitration. In: International Studies Quarterly. 2023 ; Vol. 67, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{4ac99a28701247108f4cd75ce7a70e7b,
title = "Authoritarian Propaganda Campaigns on Foreign Affairs: Four Birds, One Stone, and the South China Sea Arbitration",
abstract = "Why do authoritarian states sometimes play up dangerous international crises and embarrassing diplomatic incidents in domestic propaganda? Is it to mobilize, threaten, divert, or pacify? Recent studies in comparative politics have focused on regime legitimacy and stability as key drivers of authoritarian propaganda practices, leaving aside other possible motivations such as mobilization of the regime{\textquoteright}s domestic allies or strategic signaling aimed at foreign audiences. Foreign policy analysts, meanwhile, have emphasized international dimensions of the propaganda behavior of China—the contemporary world{\textquoteright}s most powerful and technologically sophisticated authoritarian state—but have often mistakenly framed complementary theories as competing alternative explanations. This article argues that once the multiple domestic and international audiences for authoritarian propaganda are brought into view, many supposedly competing explanations turn out to be logically compatible and, in many cases, mutually reinforcing. We identify four sets of explanations—mobilization, signaling, diversion, and pacification—first showing how they fit together logically, before illustrating their convergence in the PRC{\textquoteright}s otherwise puzzling high-intensity propaganda campaign in 2016 over the Philippines vs. China arbitration on the South China Sea.",
keywords = "Political Science and International Relations, Sociology and Political Science",
author = "Andrew Chubb and Wang, {Frances Yaping}",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1093/isq/sqad047",
language = "English",
volume = "67",
journal = "International Studies Quarterly",
issn = "0020-8833",
publisher = "Oxford University Press (OUP)",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Authoritarian Propaganda Campaigns on Foreign Affairs

T2 - Four Birds, One Stone, and the South China Sea Arbitration

AU - Chubb, Andrew

AU - Wang, Frances Yaping

PY - 2023/9/30

Y1 - 2023/9/30

N2 - Why do authoritarian states sometimes play up dangerous international crises and embarrassing diplomatic incidents in domestic propaganda? Is it to mobilize, threaten, divert, or pacify? Recent studies in comparative politics have focused on regime legitimacy and stability as key drivers of authoritarian propaganda practices, leaving aside other possible motivations such as mobilization of the regime’s domestic allies or strategic signaling aimed at foreign audiences. Foreign policy analysts, meanwhile, have emphasized international dimensions of the propaganda behavior of China—the contemporary world’s most powerful and technologically sophisticated authoritarian state—but have often mistakenly framed complementary theories as competing alternative explanations. This article argues that once the multiple domestic and international audiences for authoritarian propaganda are brought into view, many supposedly competing explanations turn out to be logically compatible and, in many cases, mutually reinforcing. We identify four sets of explanations—mobilization, signaling, diversion, and pacification—first showing how they fit together logically, before illustrating their convergence in the PRC’s otherwise puzzling high-intensity propaganda campaign in 2016 over the Philippines vs. China arbitration on the South China Sea.

AB - Why do authoritarian states sometimes play up dangerous international crises and embarrassing diplomatic incidents in domestic propaganda? Is it to mobilize, threaten, divert, or pacify? Recent studies in comparative politics have focused on regime legitimacy and stability as key drivers of authoritarian propaganda practices, leaving aside other possible motivations such as mobilization of the regime’s domestic allies or strategic signaling aimed at foreign audiences. Foreign policy analysts, meanwhile, have emphasized international dimensions of the propaganda behavior of China—the contemporary world’s most powerful and technologically sophisticated authoritarian state—but have often mistakenly framed complementary theories as competing alternative explanations. This article argues that once the multiple domestic and international audiences for authoritarian propaganda are brought into view, many supposedly competing explanations turn out to be logically compatible and, in many cases, mutually reinforcing. We identify four sets of explanations—mobilization, signaling, diversion, and pacification—first showing how they fit together logically, before illustrating their convergence in the PRC’s otherwise puzzling high-intensity propaganda campaign in 2016 over the Philippines vs. China arbitration on the South China Sea.

KW - Political Science and International Relations

KW - Sociology and Political Science

U2 - 10.1093/isq/sqad047

DO - 10.1093/isq/sqad047

M3 - Journal article

VL - 67

JO - International Studies Quarterly

JF - International Studies Quarterly

SN - 0020-8833

IS - 3

ER -