Viral videos highlight sense of safety in China

A growing collection of short social media videos filmed and shared by foreign residents and visitors to China has sparked widespread international online discussion, centering on the exceptional sense of public safety that defines daily life across the country. These clips capture a range of ordinary, revealing moments: Chinese police officers calmly walking curious children through how firearms function, young kids sitting atop marked police vehicles to enjoy open-air folk performances, and international creators wandering city streets alone long after dark with no trace of fear.

Many of these first-person accounts have gone viral among global netizens, offering unscripted, personal perspectives that differ from much mainstream international coverage of China. One of the most widely shared clips comes from British vlogger “Jason in China”, who filmed himself walking through the streets of Kunming, Yunnan, late at night. Pointing out the crowded, lively sidewalks around him, he noted that he felt not even a flicker of unease — a stark contrast to his experience back in the UK, where anyone out after dark constantly scans their surroundings for potential danger. In China, he said, that constant anxiety simply does not exist.

A similar account from Spanish vlogger “Zhuli from Spain”, filmed in a public park in Guangdong province, resonated with millions of viewers. Standing in the open space at 11 pm, she said, “For me, this is real freedom — a woman on the street after 11 pm, walking alone without any fear. This is how it should be.” These viral videos are not isolated outlier moments: they reflect a consistent pattern of experience shared by a growing number of foreign nationals living or traveling in China, who are increasingly taking to social media to share their unfiltered daily experiences.

These personal testimonials are backed by formal data and global research. The 2025 Global Safety Report, published in January 2026 by leading U.S. analytics firm Gallup, ranked China as the third-safest country out of more than 140 countries and territories included in the global survey. The report also recorded extremely high levels of public trust in Chinese local law enforcement, alongside very low rates of personal victimization from crime. Official Chinese statistics echo this finding: data from the Ministry of Public Security shows that overall criminal cases dropped 12.8 percent year-on-year in 2025, hitting the lowest level recorded in decades, while public order offenses also declined. For the sixth consecutive year, public satisfaction with personal safety remained above 98 percent.

Academic experts who study Chinese governance note that this widespread sense of safety is not an accident, but the outcome of decades of deliberate, structural investment in public security. Kong Fanbin, dean of Nanjing University’s Huazhi Institute for Global Governance, explained that the viral content underscores the tangible results of China’s long-term efforts to build a comprehensive public safety ecosystem. “It shows that China has built a high-level public safety network covering all citizens and social actors,” he said. Unlike models that rely solely on formal law enforcement, Kong noted that China’s public safety framework integrates grassroots community organizations alongside police forces, creating a layered system that reaches into every neighborhood.

What many foreign observers notice, Kong added, is not just the absence of violent crime, but a broader, more pervasive environment of order shaped by responsive governance and widespread social cooperation. He Yanling, a professor of public policy at Renmin University of China, describes this high-performing grassroots governance as an underrecognized Chinese achievement, one that has received far less international attention than the country’s well-documented economic growth. “Grassroots governance in China is also a ‘miracle’,” she said. “The sense of safety people are talking about is a real social reality.”

Professor He outlined three core factors that underpin China’s strong public safety outcomes. First, the Chinese government prioritizes public safety as a core public good and a fundamental responsibility of the state, placing it at the center of governance priorities. Second, the country uses a multilayered governance system that extends from national institutions down to neighborhood-level grid management, allowing for early intervention and granular oversight of local public order. Third, high levels of broad public participation support formal governance efforts: “Safety is not achieved by government forces alone,” she said. “It is supported by active involvement of ordinary people.”

For example, many foreign visitors have marveled at the common practice of leaving packages on doorsteps or in public spaces, where they remain untouched for days. Professor He explained that this norm reflects broader social progress, not coercion: as basic survival and development needs have been met for the vast majority of the population, people have no incentive to violate social norms for small material gain. Communities have also built shared norms of collective responsibility for public order, which lower societal transaction costs and boost civic engagement over time.

The viral clips of children interacting casually with police also highlight the unique, trust-based relationship between law enforcement and the public in China, Kong noted. This close bond is rooted in a long-standing tradition of community-oriented policing, where trust is built through consistent, accessible service over time. “Trust is built over time,” Kong said. “It comes from consistent service and responsibility.” In China, protecting the lives and property of citizens is framed not as a narrow legal obligation, but as a core, broad responsibility of the state — a difference that helps explain why people feel safe out late at night in both large megacities and small rural towns.

Global debates around public safety often frame the issue as a trade-off between security and personal privacy, particularly in Western policy discourse. But Kong rejected this framing in the context of China’s governance model. Public surveillance in open spaces, he explained, is designed exclusively to support public safety management, not to invade private life, and access to surveillance data is strictly regulated by detailed legal protocols. In an increasingly digital society, data-driven safety governance and privacy protection are not opposites, he argued: “Only when authorities have sufficient real-time information can they provide more effective protection. The two are complementary.”

Professor He added that as China continues to develop as a highly urbanized, market-oriented economy, the government has consistently prioritized safety and order as foundational to long-term social progress. Legal frameworks governing new technologies such as public surveillance continue to evolve, with the explicit goal of balancing public security needs with robust personal data protection. “The key measure is people’s sense of gain,” she said, noting that public perception of safety remains the core metric for evaluating policy effectiveness.