Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Foundations
- 1 Persuasion and Domination
- 2 A Theory of Autocratic Propaganda
- 3 A Global Dataset of Autocratic Propaganda
- Part II The Political Origins of Propaganda Strategies
- 4 The Politics of Pro-regime Propaganda
- 5 Narrating the Domestic
- 6 Narrating the World
- 7 Threatening Citizens with Repression
- Part III The Propaganda Calendar
- 8 The Propagandist’s Dilemma
- 9 Memory and Forgetting
- Part IV Propaganda, Protest, and the Future
- 10 Propaganda and Protest
- 11 Conclusion
- References
- Index
- Other books in the series
4 - The Politics of Pro-regime Propaganda
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Foundations
- 1 Persuasion and Domination
- 2 A Theory of Autocratic Propaganda
- 3 A Global Dataset of Autocratic Propaganda
- Part II The Political Origins of Propaganda Strategies
- 4 The Politics of Pro-regime Propaganda
- 5 Narrating the Domestic
- 6 Narrating the World
- 7 Threatening Citizens with Repression
- Part III The Propaganda Calendar
- 8 The Propagandist’s Dilemma
- 9 Memory and Forgetting
- Part IV Propaganda, Protest, and the Future
- 10 Propaganda and Protest
- 11 Conclusion
- References
- Index
- Other books in the series
Summary
This chapter probes the politics of pro-regime propaganda. Using a series of statistical techniques, we show that propaganda apparatuses in constrained autocracies cover the regime much like Fox News covers Republicans. Where autocrats are totally unconstrained, pro-regime propaganda is roughly four times more positive than Fox News is pro-Republican. To rule out the possibility of reverse causality and omitted variable bias, we focus on two countries for which our data extend back decades: Gabon and China. When the Berlin Wall fell and the Third Wave of Democracy forced President Omar Bongo to concede democratic reforms, his propaganda strategy changed as our theory predicts. We observe no such change in China, where the Third Wave of Democracy occasioned no such reforms. Chinese propaganda, we show, is driven by politics, not socio-economic change. With Xi Jinping poised to rule indefinitely, CCP propaganda is now more effusive than at any point since the Cultural Revolution. Using list experiments to mitigate preference falsification, we confirm that Chinese citizens view CCP pro-regime propaganda as threatening, not persuasive.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Propaganda in AutocraciesInstitutions, Information, and the Politics of Belief, pp. 125 - 172Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023