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In the 2000s, China and Russia emerged as outspoken actors with global ambitions. To communicate their status aspirations, both countries introduced a range of nation-branding institutions and initiatives. Global Internet governance – the design and administration of Internet technology and related policymaking – is among the domains where China and Russia have asserted their national brands. The Chinese and Russian governments co-advance the brand narrative of ‘Internet sovereignty’ in opposition to perceived technological and governance hegemony of the United States. Given the power that private online intermediaries wield in the political economy of the Internet, national digital media champions, China’s Baidu and Russia’s Yandex, have been integral to their countries’ Internet branding efforts. The article examines how China and Russia have forged a public–private relationship with respective digital media champions in the context of building and branding an Internet sovereignty agenda.
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Stanislav Budnitsky
Colgate University
Lianrui Jia
University of Sheffield
European Journal of Cultural Studies
York University
Carleton University
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Budnitsky et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a129bdb375951284434b418 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1367549417751151
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