Publication | Open Access
Public opinion, international reputation, and audience costs in an authoritarian regime
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Citations
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References
2020
Year
Regime AnalysisAuthoritarian RegimesChinese Foreign PolicyPublic OpinionPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesJournalismDemocracyPolitical CommunicationInternational PoliticsPublic SphereChinese PoliticsPublic PolicyInternational ReputationAuthoritarian Audience CostsAuthoritarianismGovernment CommunicationAudience CostsPolitical AttitudesArtsPolitical SciencePublic Threats
Does the public in authoritarian regimes disapprove of their leaders’ backing down from public threats and commitments? Answers to this question provide a critical micro-foundation for the emerging scholarship on authoritarian audience costs. We investigate this question by implementing a series of survey experiments in China, a single-party authoritarian state. Findings based on responses from 5375 Chinese adults show that empty threats and commitments expose the Chinese government to substantial disapproval from citizens concerned about potential damage to China’s international reputation. Additional qualitative evidence reveals that Chinese citizens are willing to express their discontent of leaders’ foreign policy blunders through various channels. These findings contribute to the ongoing debate over whether and how domestic audiences can make commitments credible in authoritarian states.
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