Analysis of an online social microblog, Sina Weibo. Researchers found that "the poor and rich areas were more willing to behave immorally, and the relation between GDP and collective moral motivation was curved. Also, normal people were less ethical when prices increased than when incomes decreased. Ecological construction and the value added by industries which used more farmers and off-farm workers were both correlated with morality. We also found a dark side to science and technological innovation, which harmed collective morality when areas grew richer."
China: International Agricultural Development Service, Arlington, Virginia.
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: Byrnes14a Document Number: C12632
Notes:
Francis C. Byrnes Collection, Pages 13-15 in IADS, Agriculture in China: today and tomorrow. Proceedings of a colloquium in Washington, D.C., August 19-20, 1983. 66 p.