Search results
Aug 10, 2018 · We use this analysis to study views of the United States among Weibo users. With a broad range of keywords associated with the United States, 23,097,889 relevant posts were classified in one of the six substantive categories. The results, shown in Table 2, are striking: On several dimensions, Chinese Weibo users like the United States! The ...
- Yichen Guan, Dustin Tingley, David Romney, Amaney Jamal, Robert Keohane
- 2020
Sina Weibo, China’s microblogging answer to Twitter, has become one of the most popular sites in China’s cyberspace since its debut in 2009. Today, the microblog has about 140 million active users.1 Compared to noninteractive communication channels, Weibo and similar social networking sites have the potential to challenge China’s authoritarian rule.2 What follows are depictions […]
Mar 20, 2019 · Forty people were killed in the accident, with almost 200 more injured. It was the third-deadliest high-speed rail disaster in history, and the first fatal crash to befall China’s gaotie network ...
Guan, Yichen, Dustin Tingley, David Romney, Amaney Jamal and Robert Keohane. 2020. Chinese views of the United States: evidence from Weibo. International Relations of the Asia-Pacific 20, no. 1 (January): 1-30 ...
Nov 6, 2023 · November 6, 2023. In recent years, views of the United States and China have changed a lot. This year, the U.S. is largely viewed positively in the 24 countries we surveyed. At the same time, China is seen much more negatively – especially in high-income countries. But favorability does not tell the whole story.
- Shannon Greenwood
Public criticism of Russian state media is rare in China, but the fact-check function is part of Weibo's latest effort to regulate misinformation on the site. Weibo rolled out the feature, called ...
People also ask
What is China's Weibo?
Why is Weibo a platform for Chinese citizens?
What did Weibo do?
Is Weibo a revolution?
What is a good example of Weibo?
Is the US viewed positively or negatively in China?
We study Chinese attitudes toward the United States, and secondarily toward Japan, Russia, and Vietnam, by analyzing social media discourse on the Chinese social media site, Weibo. We focus separately on a general analysis of attitudes and on Chinese responses to specific international events involving the United States.