Robert Garmong on Censorship in China
Radio Interview: 18 September 2013

I interviewed Robert Garmong on "Censorship in China" on 18 September 2013. Listen to or download this episode of Philosophy in Action Radio below.
How does censorship work in China? What can ordinary people access or not? What is the Chinese government most concerned to conceal? What are the consequences of speaking out? What do ordinary people think of the censorship? Robert Garmong, an American living and working in China, answered these questions and more.
Robert Garmong is Lecturer of Business at the Surrey International Institute of Dongbei University of Finance and Economics in Dalian, China. He studied economics and political science at the University of Chicago, and has a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Texas (Austin). His blog is "Professor in Dalian."
Tags: Academia, Censorship, China, Culture, Education, Free Speech, Government, History, Rights, Technology
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- Duration: 1:38:49
- Download: MP3 File (33.9 MB)
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About the Podcast 
- A few words about Allan Gotthelf
- Robert's introduction to Chinese censorship
- China's approach to censorship
- Censorship at the university
- The internet in Hong Kong
- Limitations on teaching
- The effectiveness of censorship with students
- Censorship of the mainstream media
- Censorship of new social media
- Circumventing censorship
- The effectiveness of censorship
- Awareness of disappeared persons
- China and the four elements of dictatorship
Relevant Links 
- Robert Garmong's Blog: Professor in Dalian
- Academics Launch Fake Social Network to Get an Inside Look at Chinese Censorship
- Philosophy in Action: Robert Garmong on Teaching in China
- Philosophy in Action: Robert Garmong on Should We Fear or Embrace China?
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I'm Dr. Diana Brickell (formerly Diana Hsieh). I'm a philosopher, and I've long specialized in the application of rational principles to the challenges of real life. I completed my Ph.D in philosophy from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2009. I retired from work as a public intellectual in 2015.
From September 2009 to September 2015, I produced a radio show and podcast, Philosophy in Action Radio. In the primary show, my co-host Greg Perkins and I answered questions applying rational principles to the challenges of real life. We broadcast live over the internet on Sunday mornings.
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