Abstract

Traditionally, Chinese people are deeply trapped in an intricate web of guanxi and their charitable commitment is mainly limited within close ties. Recently, the rising social media provides new potential for people’s participation in micro-charity online. With connectivity, the socio-technological affordance of social media, people’s participation in micro-charity is imbued with distinct meanings from that in traditional charity. This study drew on in-depth interview with eight college students. The results indicate that the participants’ engagement and commitment are embedded in their interactive activities and end up having significant consequences both for charity and for themselves. During the process, participants undergo rich subjective experience which is clustered around developing connection, fostering engagement, encouraging collaboration and empowering their selves. This study concludes that people’s participation in micro-charity is mixed with connective actions – a hybrid that increasingly applies to life within a space of connectivity in which traditional guanxi is losing its grip on individuals, and blood and clan-ties-based relations are being replaced by large-scale, fluid social networks.

Highlights

  • Charity is a very important aspect of people’s civic life

  • Luo and Li argue that Chinese people are deeply trapped in an intricate web of guanxi which has restrained them to cultivate their ‘charity consciousness’(Luo & Li, 2010)

  • Just as a popular saying goes, ‘it is danger to talk to strangers.’. In this micro-charity, college students performed in a different way

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Summary

Introduction

Charity is a very important aspect of people’s civic life. It fosters ethical development and catalyses interpersonal bonds and promotes social solidarity. In China, charity is lagging far behind its boost economic development (Yan, Huang, Foster, & Tester, 2007) and this, as Luo and Li (2010) note, is mainly due to the entrenched traditional guanxi-oriented culture. Over the past several years, micro-charity has become increasingly popular, especially among young generation. We have noticed such an emerging change and contend that it is an innovative for the development of charity in China. We aim to examine their new, at least distinct, subjective experience with its comparison to that in traditional charity

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