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Item Open Access CHINA`S ECONOMIC AND SECURITY INTERESTS IN CENTRAL ASIA(Қазақстан ғылымының дамуы мен келешегі жастар көзімен - 2018, 2018) Akyngaziyeva A.A.For Central Asia, when entering the world market economy, it is especially important to study the peculiarities of the development of mighty China as a neighbor, as a partner and as a competitor. The main objective of this work is to find the interests of the PRC in the period of economic development, to explore the features of development and security with respect to political interests to the countries of Central Asia. In my work, the opportunities of China, which can become the leader of the world economy, are indicated. In a word, the role of Central Asia is defined as mutual understanding of the countries and separately with respect to China.Item Open Access A Comparative Study of the Effectiveness of Pandemic Information Dissemination between Self-Media and Traditional Media in China and Kazakhstan(SDU Journal of Media Studies, 2025) WanhangYuIn the post-truth era, emotions and positions gradually overtake objective facts and become the dominant factors in public perception. Taking China and Kazakhstan as case studies, this study compares and analyzes the differences in the information dissemination effects of self media and traditional media during theCOVID-19in the two countries through questionnaires. Through quantitative content analysis and audience surveys, it is found that China’s self-media rapidly spread information about the epidemic by virtue of immediacy and interactivity, but some of the content exacerbated rumor dissemination due to excessiveemotionality; traditional media, although subject to policy regulation and control, showed higher consistency, but dominated in terms of public trust. In Kazakhstan, due to the relative concentration of traditional media resources, the authority of traditional media was still dominant in the early stage of the epidemic, but the fragmentation and contradiction of information in the self-media due to lax regulation weakened the public’s recognition of official information. The study further reveals that differences in audience trust in media between the two countries are influenced by political culture, media ecology, and information governance model: the Chinese public is more institutionally dependent on traditional media, while the young population in Kazakhstan prefers to obtain pluralistic information through cross-border self-media. This study provides new perspectives for comparing the mechanisms of post-truth communication in transnational contexts and suggests ways to optimize information governance strategies in public health emergencies.