Automating Governance in China?
Title
Automating Governance in China?
Subtitle
Data-Driven Systems in the Scoring Society
Price
€ 122,00
ISBN
9789087284657
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
270
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Discipline
Asian Studies
Table of Contents
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1. Automating Governance and Data-Driven Scoring in China: A Critical Introduction - Haiqing Yu and Rogier Creemers;
2. Locating and Localising Automated Decision-Making Failures in China - Xin Dai;
3. A Democratic Ethos? Explorations of Blockchains and Governance in China - Warwick Powell;
4. Techno-Utopia or Techno-Trap? Unveiling the Enigma of Smart Courts in China's Judicial Reform - Fan Yang;
5. Balancing Control and Engagement: China's Sociotechnical Imaginary in Facial Recognition Technology - Xin Gu, Gavin Smith, Neil Selwyn, Mark Andrejevic, and Chris O’Neil;
6. The Social Credit System as a Law-Enforcing Tool: Pillars of Local Implementations - Haemin Jee;
7. Scientific Fairness: Experimentation and Critique of Points Systems in Shenzhen - Anne-Christine Trémon;
8. Queer Social Sorting: Control and Criminalization in China’s LGBTQ+ Activism - Ausma Bernot;
9. Regulating Price Discrimination on Chinese Digital Platforms - Haiqing Yu and Xuanzi Xu;
10. The Algorithmic Divide in China and an Emerging Comparative Research Agenda - Peter Yu

Haiqing Yu, Rogier Creemers (eds)

Automating Governance in China?

Data-Driven Systems in the Scoring Society

This book considers the interplay between the affordances of technologies, the experiences and processes of technological systems, and the process of learning and adaptation by state actors as part of governance reform in China. It offers detailed studies of specific projects and applications that are automated or quasi-automated in organising and governing social, economic, and cultural lives in the world’s largest techno-authoritarian regime. Written by scholars from six countries across four continents, case studies illustrate new modes of digital governance employed by the Chinese government, as it interacts and collaborates with technology companies, ordinary citizens, and other key stakeholders. They offer new insights on the deployment of automated decision-making in authoritarian governance, and on its application and implementation in real-life scenarios. In a broader sense, the book contributes to global debates about the integration of decision-making technologies in governmental practices.
Editors

Haiqing Yu

Haiqing Yu is a Professor of Media and Communication and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow at RMIT University, Australia. She is a critical media studies scholar with expertise on Chinese digital media, technologies and cultures, with a focus on their sociopolitical impacts in China, Australia and the Asia Pacific.

Rogier Creemers

" Rogier Creemers is an Associate Professor in the Law and Governance of China at Leiden University. His research investigates China’s domestic technology policies, as well as China’s participation in global cyber affairs. He is a founding member of DigiChina, a project run in cooperation with New America, as well as a frequent contributor to international news media. "