LSE creators

Number of items: 32.
LSE
  • Cammaerts, Bart, Meng, Bingchun (2011). Media Policy Project Policy Brief 1: Creative Destruction and Copyright Protection.
  • Law School
  • Meng, Bingchun (2018). The politics of Chinese media: consensus and contestation. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Media and Communications
  • Meng, Bingchun, Zhang, Lin, Yuan, Elaine (2025). Whither China? Chinese communication research at the new conjuncture. Chinese Journal of Communication, 18(3), 251 - 259. https://doi.org/10.1080/17544750.2025.2544452
  • Meng, Bingchun (2025). Post-socialist imaginaries of the Digital Third Front: the case of Guizhou-Cloud Big Data. Social Media and Society, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251316949 picture_as_pdf
  • Meng, Bingchun (15 January 2024) Confronting the China Problem. Media@LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Meng, Bingchun, Chen, Zifeng, Wang, Veronica Jingyi (2024). Cosmopolitan imperative or a nationalist sentiment? Mediated experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic among Chinese overseas students. In Yang, Guobin, Meng, Binchun, Yuan, Elaine J. (Eds.), Pandemic Crossings: Digital Technology, Everyday Experience, and Governance in the COVID-19 Crisis (pp. 115 - 136). Michigan State University. Press. https://doi.org/10.14321/jj.13049274.10
  • Yang, Guobin, Meng, Bingchun, Yuan, Elaine J. (Eds.) (2024). Pandemic crossings: digital technology, everyday experience, and governance in the COVID-19 Crisis. Michigan State University. Press. https://doi.org/10.14321/jj.13049274
  • Meng, Bingchun, Yang, Guobin, Yuan, Elaine J. (2024). Preface. In Yang, Guobin, Meng, Bingchun, Yuan, Elaine J. (Eds.), Pandemic Crossings: Digital Technology, Everyday Experience, and Governance in the COVID-19 Crisis (pp. IX - XXIV). Michigan State University. Press. https://doi.org/10.14321/jj.13049274.3
  • Meng, Bingchun (2023). Dialectical imagination: Frankfurt School and IAMCR. In Becker, Jörg, Mansell, Robin (Eds.), Reflections on the International Association for Media and Communication Research: Many Voices, One Forum (pp. 9 - 19). Springer International (Firm). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-16383-8_2 picture_as_pdf
  • Meng, Bingchun (2023). This is China’s Sputnik moment: the politics and poetics of artificial intelligence. Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, 25(3), 351 - 369. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369801X.2021.2003227 picture_as_pdf
  • Meng, Bingchun (2020). When anxious mothers meet social media: WeChat, motherhood and the imaginary of the good life. Javnost - the Public, 27(2), 171 - 185. https://doi.org/10.1080/13183222.2020.1727276 picture_as_pdf
  • Orgad, Shani, Meng, Bingchun (2017). The maternal in the city: outdoor advertising representations in Shanghai and London. Communication, Culture & Critique, 10(3), 460-478. https://doi.org/10.1111/cccr.12171
  • Meng, Bingchun, Huang, Yanning (2017). Patriarchal capitalism with Chinese characteristics: gendered discourse of ‘Double Eleven’ shopping festival. Cultural Studies, 31(5), 659 - 684. https://doi.org/10.1080/09502386.2017.1328517
  • Meng, Bingchun (2016). Political scandal at the end of ideology? The mediatized politics of the Bo Xilai case. Media, Culture & Society, 38(6), 811 - 826. https://doi.org/10.1177/0163443716635858
  • Meng, Bingchun, Rantanen, Terhi (2016). The worlding of St. Petersburg and Shanghai: comparing cultures of communication in two cities before and after revolutions. Communication, Culture & Critique, 9(3), 323 - 340. https://doi.org/10.1111/cccr.12116
  • Meng, Bingchun, Rantanen, Terhi (2015). A change of lens: a call to compare media in China and Russia. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 32(1), 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2014.997831
  • Cammaerts, Bart, Meng, Bingchun, Mansell, Robin (2013). Copyright and creation authors respond to critics.
  • Cammaerts, Bart, Meng, Bingchun, Mansell, Robin (2013). Copyright and creation: a case for promoting inclusive online sharing. (LSE Media Policy Project Series Media Policy Brief 9). Department of Media and Communications.
  • Meng, Bingchun, Wu, Fei (2013). Commons/commodity: peer production caught in the Web of the commercial market. Information, Communication and Society, 16(1), 125-145. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118X.2012.675347
  • Meng, Bingchun (2012). Book review: political economies of the media: the transformation of the global media, by Dwayne Winseck and Dal Yong Jin.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2012). Underdetermined globalization: media consumption via P2P networks. International Journal of Communication, 6, 467-483.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2011). From steamed bun to grass mud horse: e gao as alternative political discourse on the Chinese internet. Global Media and Communication, 7(1), 33-51. https://doi.org/10.1177/1742766510397938
  • Cammaerts, Bart, Meng, Bingchun (2011). The government’s new Digital Economy Act will do little to prevent file sharing – the music industry must continue to innovate online if it is to survive.
  • Cammaerts, Bart, Meng, Bingchun (2011). Creative destruction and copyright protection: regulatory responses to file-sharing. (LSE Media Policy Project Series Media Policy Brief 1). Department of Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Cammaerts, Bart, Meng, Bingchun (2011). The DEA and our online privacy.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2010). Moving beyond democratization: a thought piece on the China internet research agenda. International Journal of Communication, 4, 501-508.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2009). Regulating e gao: futile efforts of recentralization? In Zhang, Xiaoling, Zhang, Yongnian (Eds.), China's Information and Communications Technology Revolution: Social Changes and State Responses (pp. 52-67). Routledge.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2009). Articulating a Chinese commons: an explorative study of creative commons in China. International Journal of Communication, 3, 192-207.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2009). Destruction of new media's myth on democracy: a review on historicizing online politics: telegraphy, the internet, and political participation in China. Twenty-First Century Review, 113(4), 128-134.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2009). Who needs democracy if we can pick our favorite girl?: Super Girl as media spectacle. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(3), 257-272. https://doi.org/10.1080/17544750903208996
  • Meng, Bingchun (2008-12-22 - 2008-12-26) Who needs democracy if we can pick our favorite girl? 'Supergirl' media politics, and the Chinese society [Paper]. Communicating for social impact, Montreal, Canada, CAN.
  • Meng, Bingchun (2007). Property right or development strategy?: protection of foreign copyright in 19th Century America and contemporary China. Media@lse, London School of Economics and Political Science.