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Published in: Journal of Chinese Political Science 1/2020

06-08-2019 | Research Article

Social Desirability of Dissent: an IAT Experiment with Chinese University Students

Authors: Yingnan Joseph Zhou, Wenfang Tang, Xuchuan Lei

Published in: Journal of Chinese Political Science | Issue 1/2020

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Abstract

Researchers have been wary about social desirability of approval in authoritarian countries, namely, the tendency for people to overreport their regime support. Few have studied the social desirability of dissent, the reverse tendency for people to underreport their regime support. This paper argues that social desirability of dissent exists among Chinese university students because 1) the Chinese government has loosened its control on speech, 2) Chinese university students experience peer pressure to be aloof from the government, 3) blatant propaganda gives regime supporters a negative image, and 4) open expression of regime support may associate one with the infamous Fifty Cent Party. We conducted an implicit association test (IAT) among 306 Chinese university students and found distinct social desirability of dissent among them. We also found that the effect of social desirability of dissent is stronger among firm regime supporters identified by the IAT than among weak supporters.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
In 2008, 88% of Chinese people reported that they fully trust or somewhat trust the national government (Asian Barometer Study II). Comparatively speaking, the level of support is high. The percentages of people who fully or somewhat trust the national government are 38 in Germany (Eurobarometer 2010), 24 in Britain (Eurobarometer 2010), 13 in France (Eurobarometer 2010), 20 in the United States (Evaluations of Government and Society Study 2010), and 12 in Japan (Asian Barometer Study III).
 
2
As of 2017, China has 196 million people with college degrees and 29 million university students currently enrolled [64, 65].
 
3
Please note that we are not trying to challenge the notion that Chinese college students support their government. They only tend to underreport such support so that they may appear independent and thoughtful.
 
4
Currently, there are four mandatory courses: Principles of Marxism (马克思主义原理), Ideological and Moral Cultivation (思想道德修养), Essentials of Mao Zedong Thought (毛泽东思想概论), and Modern Chinese History (中国近现代史).
 
5
Implicit and explicit preferences in the same direction: implicit measure ≥0 and explicit measure ≥0, or measure ≤0 and explicit measure ≤0.
An implicit preference for the university and an explicit preference for the center: implicit measure <0 and explicit measure >0.
An implicit preference for the center and an explicit preference for the university: implicit measure >0 and explicit measure <0.
 
6
CGSS 2013 has a better time frame but it asks no question on political trust or political support.
 
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Metadata
Title
Social Desirability of Dissent: an IAT Experiment with Chinese University Students
Authors
Yingnan Joseph Zhou
Wenfang Tang
Xuchuan Lei
Publication date
06-08-2019
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Journal of Chinese Political Science / Issue 1/2020
Print ISSN: 1080-6954
Electronic ISSN: 1874-6357
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11366-019-09628-9

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