Handling COVID-19 with big data in China: increasing 'governance capacity' or 'function creep'?

Building a national system of social governance (guojia zhili tixi), which is the long-running governance dream of Xi Jinping, has triggered the creation of China's 'smart state' using the tools of new information technologies to advance governance capacity (zhili nengli). These syste...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inAustralian journal of international affairs Vol. 75; no. 5; pp. 480 - 486
Main Authors Bernot, Ausma, Trauth-Goik, Alexander, Trevaskes, Susan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Canberra Routledge 03.09.2021
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Building a national system of social governance (guojia zhili tixi), which is the long-running governance dream of Xi Jinping, has triggered the creation of China's 'smart state' using the tools of new information technologies to advance governance capacity (zhili nengli). These systems were already deployed nationally when the COVID-19 pandemic hit China, but were connected at a lesser capacity, targeting specific domains of security, industry or government administration. In response to the crisis, multiple technologies have been merged, exceeding the scope of their originally intended functions. This is known as function creep, when surveillant technologies remain functional past achievement of their intended purpose, or surveillant assemblages, where multiple surveillant technologies are combined. As more countries turn to digitalisation to increase public security and intensify social and market governance, the expansion of surveillant functions in China and their now-palpable effects on people's lives raises new and pressing questions for scholars and decision-makers alike.
ISSN:1035-7718
1465-332X
DOI:10.1080/10357718.2021.1956430