---
title: 'Worldwide Respondents Approve China&#8217;s Role in Human Rights Governance, CGTN Poll Finds'
url: 'https://thediplomaticinsight.com/respondents-approve-china-human-rights-cgtn-poll/'
author: 'News Desk'
date: '2026-06-12T16:01:15+05:00'
categories:
  - 'China'
---

# Worldwide Respondents Approve China&#8217;s Role in Human Rights Governance, CGTN Poll Finds

**Beijing (TDI): **A survey of 12,000 people across 43 countries, conducted by CGTN in partnership with Renmin University of China through the New Era International Communication Research Institute, has found broadly positive global attitudes toward China’s human rights governance.

The survey was released on the occasion of the 2026 Forum on Global Human Rights Governance in Beijing, where China also unveiled its National Human Rights Action Plan for 2026–2030.

According to the findings, satisfaction exceeded 60% across eight governance fields including infrastructure, education, employment, per capita income, living environment, public health, social security, and ecological governance.

![](https://thediplomaticinsight.com/wp-content/uploads/WhatsApp-Image-2026-06-12-at-3.52.06-AM.jpeg)

The top four categories; infrastructure, education, employment, and income, each received satisfaction ratings above 70%.

Younger respondents were particularly positive. Among those aged 18 to 24, satisfaction with the Chinese government’s performance in infrastructure reached 83.6%, and in education 85.9%.

More than 60% of respondents praised China’s global governance contributions, satisfaction with the Belt and Road Initiative stood at over 70%, and 78.2% of respondents said they appreciated China’s vision of building a community with a shared future for humanity.

![](https://thediplomaticinsight.com/wp-content/uploads/Image_20260612154509_1141_1.jpg-1024x683.jpeg)

Among respondents from Global South countries, approval ratings for the Belt and Road Initiative’s role in promoting inclusive development and building a more equitable global governance system both exceeded 80%.

Respondents from developed nations, meanwhile, tended to view China’s vision as complementary to, rather than transformative of, their own countries’ philosophies.

The survey was conducted online using a sample matched to national census distributions by age and gender, and its findings have been compiled into a Blue Book on China’s role in global human rights governance.