The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
The research for this book spanned six years. From 2009 to 2015, I traveled to many different localities in China—Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Wuhan, Changsha, Hefei, and so forth—and interviewed hundreds of journalists, observers, experts, opinion leaders, and academics. I would like to thank all the interviewees who have talked to me on the subject: Bei Feng,...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
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The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
Following the usual practice in China, the Chinese names appearing in this book are written with the family name first and then followed by the given name, although the author’s name and the academic references cited in the text are written in the Western style.
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
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The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
When the English writer Charles Dickens wrote this prologue to his novel A Tale of Two Cities more than one and a half centuries ago, he could never have predicted that it would travel so far and have such long-lasting influence that it would be cited frequently by people from a completely different continent and background in the twenty-first century. The contradictions and ambiguities...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
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The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
Deng Xiaoping turned the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) away from the pursuit of a goal of complete socialism through a wholly state-owned economy, into a monopoly of political management corporation with strongly...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
5,295
The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
In chapter 2, I argued that the Chinese media have been commercially successful but politically tame in the period since the media reform. But many experts would disagree with this argument: and the main evidence to which they point is the emergence and development of investigative journalism. Both journalists and academics who believe this have tended to stress that the vigor of investigative...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
10,785
The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
The UNESCO World Press Freedom Prize is given annually in the name of Guillermo Cano. Cano was the editor of Colombia’s El Espectador (meaning “The Spectator”), founded in 1887, the country’s oldest, and most liberal, newspaper. He was shot dead, in December 1986, in front of the office of the paper which he had edited for thirty-four years. He was sixty-one. It was...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
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The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
To blend “activism” into journalism may sound cynical in the context of some media systems, especially in the liberal pluralist model which exists in countries such as the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Ireland (Hallin and Mancini, 2004). But in the Chinese context, there has been a long tradition of journalism acting in partnership with activism. Tracing the...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
10,254
The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
I have argued in the previous chapters that journalism in the mainstream media in contemporary China is subject to various constraints and restrictions, that the reporting space for journalists is severely squeezed and limited to the topics defined by the Party-state. This means that many journalists, realizing these limitations, have begun to call for new journalistic models that are both more...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
3,848
The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
It is a curious fact of journalistic life in China that the Western way of doing journalism has penetrated so strongly into journalistic practice that Chinese journalists felt they had to avoid talking about doing advocacy journalism. But from 2010 onward, that began to change. Frustrated with the limitations placed on them, and increasingly determined to use what power and access they had to...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
16,432
The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
In the previous chapter, we saw that as the movement of journalistic activism developed, certain individuals became prominent within it. Among others, we can single out Chang Ping, an editor and writer at the South Daily Press Group in Guangzhou; Bei Feng, an influential blogger and anticensorship campaigner; Xiao Shu, who was involved in investigating the death of Qian Yunhui; and the journalist...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
11,175
The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
Chinese journalism has changed greatly in the past few decades, since Deng Xiaoping’s reform decreed in the 1980s that the media could be partly privatized and thus had to respond more to the wishes of their audiences. A new generation of Chinese journalists appeared, who saw their task as performing truthful journalism: exposing corruption and other crimes and independently analyzing the...
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
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The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
4,069
The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
A Tale of Two Cities,1.2 ,
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
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The Transformation of Investigative Journalism in China
 
Haiyan Wang
Lexington Books
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