Greg Austin has produced a much needed, comprehensive examination of China's evolving approach to the increasingly important cyber world. Austin focuses on Chinese cyber policies and views in three critical areas: domestic politics, economics, and national security. He concludes that while China is well positioned to become a major advanced information society, it will fail to reap the benefits of such a development if it remains locked in its current "ethical dead end". This is an essential read for anyone interested in the impact of China's rise on a key global issue.
Michael D. Swaine, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, DC
In this book, Greg Austin offers a convincing analysis of the dilemma China is facing: this country has ambitions to become an advanced information society, but while developing its own version of e-government, the Communist Party remains keen to monitor and control the internet tightly. In the Chinese cyberspace, security overrides information. Under such conditions can China continue to rise? Cyber Policy in China will convince you that the country may not unless it introduces dramatic political changes.
Jean-Pierre Cabestan, Hong Kong Baptist University