Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Steve Mann, Jason Nolan, B. Wellman (2002)
Sousveillance: Inventing and Using Wearable Computing Devices for Data Collection in Surveillance Environments.surveillance and society, 1
Cheng-Chih Lee, Denise Li, Shoshana Arai, K. Puntillo (2009)
Ensuring Cross-Cultural Equivalence in Translation of Research Consents and Clinical DocumentsJournal of Transcultural Nursing, 20
R. Creemers (2015)
China’s chilling plan to use social credit ratings to keep score on its citizens
A. Browne (2017)
China’s big brother is watching you do business: Beijing aims to harness big data to monitor and rate companies; ‘IT-backed authoritarianism’
Celia Kitzinger, D. Powell (1995)
Engendering Infidelity: Essentialist and Social Constructionist Readings of a Story Completion TaskFeminism & Psychology, 5
M. Andrejevic (2002)
The Work of Watching One Another: Lateral Surveillance, Risk, and Governancesurveillance and society, 2
Gareth Terry, Virginia Braun (2017)
Short but Often Sweet
Fuzhou Wanbao (2018)
Fuzhou ‘Molifen’ is now available online. Search your ‘score’, you will know about your credit (Fuzhou ‘Molifen’ yishangxianyunxing, nide xinyong ruhe chacha ‘fenshu’ jiu zhidao)
D. Lyon (2010)
National IDs in a Global World: Surveillance, Security, and CitizenshipCase Western Reserve Journal of International Law, 42
D. Lyon (2001)
Facing the future: Seeking ethics for everyday surveillanceEthics and Information Technology, 3
G. Potter (2018)
China's "Networked Authoritarianism"
(2018)
U.S. Media: China’s social credit system is entering into everyday life (Meimei: Zhongguode xinyongjifen zheng kuozhan dao richangshenghuo)
L. Gibson (2017)
Type Me Your Answer
Anders Albrechtslund, P. Lauritsen (2013)
Spaces of everyday surveillance: Unfolding an analytical concept of participationGeoforum, 49
Money China (Caijingjie), 16
Gary King, Jennifer Pan, Margaret Roberts (2013)
How Censorship in China Allows Government Criticism but Silences Collective ExpressionAmerican Political Science Review, 107
A. Hintz, I. Brown (2017)
Digital Citizenship amd Surveillance| Enabling Digital Citizenship? The Reshaping of Surveillance Policy After SnowdenInternational Journal of Communication, 11
D. Fidler, Sumit Ganguly (2015)
The Snowden Reader
Yanhua Deng, Kevin O'Brien (2013)
Relational Repression in China: Using Social Ties to Demobilize Protesters*The China Quarterly, 215
K. Cukier, Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, Mircea Pitici (2014)
The Rise of Big Data: How It’s Changing the Way We Think about the World
Min Jiang (2010)
Authoritarian Informationalism: China’s Approach to Internet SovereigntySAIS Review of International Affairs, 30
(2018c)
Main areas (Zhongdian lingyu)
J. Qiu (2016)
Social media on the picket lineMedia, Culture & Society, 38
(2016)
The planning outline for the construction of a social credit system (2014–2020) (Shehuixinyong tixi jianshe gangyao (2014-2020 nian))
Shinjoung Yeo (2016)
Geopolitics of search: Google versus China?Media, Culture & Society, 38
Lokman Tsui (2003)
The Panopticon as the Antithesis of a Space of FreedomChina Information, 17
Shijinshi Xinyong (2018)
Shijinshi credit (Shijinshi Xinyong)
R. Diab (2017)
Becoming-Infrastructure: Datafication, Deactivation and the Social Credit System, 1
M. Friedewald, J. Burgess, J. Cas, R. Bellanova, W. Peissl (2017)
Surveillance, Privacy and Security: Citizens’ Perspectives
David Allen, M. McAleer, Abhay Singh (2014)
WORKING PAPER No . 12 / 2014 Risk Measurement and Risk Modelling Using Applications of Vine Copulas
G. Zhu, Kevin So, S. Hudson (2017)
Inside the sharing economy: Understanding consumer motivations behind the adoption of mobile applicationsInternational Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, 29
D. Boyd, K. Crawford (2012)
CRITICAL QUESTIONS FOR BIG DATAInformation, Communication & Society, 15
L. Taylor (2017)
What is data justice? The case for connecting digital rights and freedoms globallyBig Data & Society, 4
L. Dencik, A. Hintz, J. Cable (2016)
Towards data justice? The ambiguity of anti-surveillance resistance in political activismBig Data & Society, 3
Deborah Lupton, Ben Williamson (2017)
The datafied child: The dataveillance of children and implications for their rightsNew Media & Society, 19
J. Dijck (2014)
Datafication, dataism and dataveillance: Big Data between scientific paradigm and ideologysurveillance and society, 12
Deborah Lupton (2015)
Data assemblages, sentient schools and digitised health and physical education (response to Gard)Sport, Education and Society, 20
I. Manokha (2018)
Surveillance, Panopticism, and Self-Discipline in the Digital AgeSurveillance & Society
Peter Schmitt, Aldo Leopold (2020)
Once upon a Time . . .Grounded
J. Chin, G. Wong (2016)
China’s new tool for social control: a credit rating for everythingThe Wall Street Journal
(2018a)
City credit report (Chengshi xinyong jianbao)
Gary King, Jennifer Pan, Margaret Roberts (2014)
Reverse-engineering censorship in China: Randomized experimentation and participant observationScience, 345
(2004)
Globalizing surveillance: comparative and sociological perspectives
Rogier Creemers (2017)
Cyber China: Upgrading Propaganda, Public Opinion Work and Social Management for the Twenty-First CenturyJournal of Contemporary China, 26
David Bamman, Brendan O'Connor, Noah Smith (2012)
Censorship and deletion practices in Chinese social mediaFirst Monday, 17
(2018)
Zhimaxinyongfen 750 yishang doushi shenmeren? Zhongliudizhu zhan bi 20% (Who are the sesame credits above 750? The middle pillar accounts for 20%)
(2017)
Notice on printing and distributing the construction plan of Qingdao’s ‘13th five-year plan’ social credit system (Guanyu yinfa Qingdaoshi ‘Shisanwu’ shehuixinyongtixi jianshe guihua de tongzhi)
N. Amundson (1985)
The Use of Story Completion Method in Career CounsellingCanadian Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy, 19
(2017)
Digital citizenship and surveillance society
Baogang He (2004)
Participatory and Deliberative Institutions in China
D. Gray, B. Royall, H. Malson (2015)
Hypothetically speaking: Using vignettes as a stand-alone qualitative method
Haifeng Huang (2015)
A War of (Mis)Information: The Political Effects of Rumors and Rumor Rebuttals in an Authoritarian CountryBritish Journal of Political Science, 47
(2018b)
Main page (Shouye)
이승은 (2017)
Discourses on Constructing a Society in Contemporary China - From “Harmonious Society,” “Social Management” to “Social Governance” -China and Sinology, 31
Ladislav Luc (2018)
China’s social Credit System
(2018)
Infordemics: a case study of Weibo
A. Zwitter (2014)
Big Data ethicsBig Data & Society, 1
Marcelo Baro (2012)
Percepciones sobre capital social en ArgentinaGlobal media journal, 9
(2018)
Credits are ‘newly locked’ for bike-sharing and more industries entered Entering into the age of consumption (Gongxiangdanche xinyongshang ‘xinsuo’ gengduohangye huo mairu xinyongxiaofeishidai)
Craig Dalton, L. Taylor, Jim Thatcher (2016)
Critical Data Studies: A dialog on data and spaceBig Data & Society, 3
J. Chen (2018)
Technologies of Control, Communication, and Calculation: Taxi Drivers’ Labour in the Platform Economy
Jing Lan, Yuge Ma, Dajian Zhu, D. Mangalagiu, Thomas Thornton (2017)
Enabling Value Co-Creation in the Sharing Economy: The Case of MobikeSustainability, 9
D. Lyon (2014)
Surveillance, Snowden, and Big Data: Capacities, consequences, critiqueBig Data & Society, 1
M. Maurtvedt (2017)
The Chinese the social credit system: surveillance and social manipulation: a solution to ‘moral decay’?
International Journal of Communication, 11
M. Andrejevic, K. Gates (2014)
Big Data Surveillance: Introductionsurveillance and society, 12
Clare Birchall (2016)
Shareveillance: Subjectivity between open and closed dataBig Data & Society, 3
Xiaoyan Pan (2010)
Hunt by the Crowd: An Exploratory Qualitative Analysis on Cyber Surveillance in ChinaGlobal media journal, 9
J. Silverman (2015)
China’s troubling new social credit system – and oursThe New Republic
J. Danaher, M. Hogan, Chris Noone, Rónán Kennedy, Anthony Behan, A. Paor, Heike Felzmann, M. Haklay, S. Khoo, J. Morison, M. Murphy, Niall O'Brolchain, Burkhard Schafer, K. Shankar (2017)
Algorithmic governance: Developing a research agenda through the power of collective intelligenceBig Data & Society, 4
(2000)
Hypothetically speaking.Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987), 14 48
H. Kennedy, J. Bates (2017)
Data Power in Material Contexts: IntroductionTelevision & New Media, 18
Thomas Hegghammer (2013)
Should I Stay or Should I Go? Explaining Variation in Western Jihadists' Choice between Domestic and Foreign FightingAmerican Political Science Review, 107
Baidu Tieba (2018)
Baidu Tieba
Vito Laterza (2018)
Cambridge Analytica, independent research and the national interestAnthropology Today
J. Qiu (2015)
Reflections on Big Data: ‘Just because it is accessible does not make it ethical’Media, Culture & Society, 37
D. Giles (2017)
Online Discussion Forums
Massimo Ragnedda (2011)
Social control and surveillance in the society of consumersInternational journal of sociology and anthropology, 3
The purpose of this paper is twofold: first, to explore how China uses a social credit system as part of its “data-driven authoritarianism” policy; and second, to investigate how datafication, which is a method to legitimize data collection, and dataveillance, which is continuous surveillance through the use of data, offer the Chinese state a legitimate method of monitoring, surveilling and controlling citizens, businesses and society. Taken together, China’s social credit system is analyzed as an integrated tool for datafication, dataveillance and data-driven authoritarianism.Design/methodology/approachThis study combines the personal narratives of 22 Chinese citizens with policy analyses, online discussions and media reports. The stories were collected using a scenario-based story completion method to understand the participants’ perceptions of the recently introduced social credit system in China.FindingsChina’s new social credit system, which turns both online and offline behaviors into a credit score through smartphone apps, creates a “new normal” way of life for Chinese citizens. This data-driven authoritarianism uses data and technology to enhance citizen surveillance. Interactions between individuals, technologies and information emerge from understanding the system as one that provides social goods, using technologies, and raising concerns of privacy, security and collectivity. An integrated critical perspective that incorporates the concepts of datafication and dataveillance enhances a general understanding of how data-driven authoritarianism develops through the social credit system.Originality/valueThis study builds upon an ongoing debate and an emerging body of literature on datafication, dataveillance and digital sociology while filling empirical gaps in the study of the global South. The Chinese social credit system has growing recognition and importance as both a governing tool and a part of everyday datafication and dataveillance processes. Thus, these phenomena necessitate discussion of its consequences for, and applications by, the Chinese state and businesses, as well as affected individuals’ efforts to adapt to the system.
Online Information Review – Emerald Publishing
Published: Oct 9, 2019
Keywords: China; Deviance; Dataveillance; Data-driven authoritarianism; Datafication; Social credit score system; Digital sociology; Critical data studies; Digital space
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.