Foreign NGO Training for Lawyers, Taxation Requirements, the Changsha High-Tech Zone

Ministry of Public Security WeChat Posts—June 14, 2018

Today, the Shanghai Public Security Bureau (PSB) Foreign NGO Management Office, together with the Shanghai Law Society, held a first round of Foreign NGO Law training for lawyers at the Shanghai University of International Business and Economics. A total of 34 lawyers from 20 well-established law firms in Shanghai participated and received a certificate of completion from the Shanghai Law Society. The training included classroom learning, on-site teaching, case studies, and exchanges. During the training, participants addressed questions related to legal issues surrounding the work of foreign NGOs in China and to the role of law firms in this process. They also provided suggestions for the overall promotion and effective implementation of the foreign NGO law.

Gabrielle Chefitz

Gabrielle Chefitz received a Master in Public Policy degree from Harvard Kennedy School in 2018, where she studied U.S. foreign policy with a focus on national security.

After receiving her B.A. from the Northwestern Medill School of Journalism, Chefitz served as a Research Assistant for the Project on the Middle East Peace Process at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Previously, she spent a year at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as a legislative intern covering the Middle East and was an intern with the Department of Defense working on U.S. security policy towards the Gulf States.

Sam Parker

Sam Parker received his Master in Public Policy degree from Harvard Kennedy School in 2018. A Belfer Center International and Global Affairs (BIGA) student fellow while at the Kennedy School, his interest is in national security policy and crisis communications.

After studying government and economics at Colby College, Parker served at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security as the Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs. Previously, he worked at the Queens District Attorney’s Office’s Special Victims Bureau and assisted with message development for the “It’s On US” campaign against campus sexual assault as a White House intern. At Colby, his senior thesis predicted and analyzed how demographic changes over the next 30 years will affect the electoral map.

Meituan Wants to Be the Grubhub of China (and the Yelp, and the Groupon, and the Kayak)

China’s burgeoning middle class, which increasingly is going online for everything from ordering lunch to booking hotel rooms, is fueling expectations that an 8-year-old startup with an innovative smartphone app will go public at a lofty $60 billion valuation this year.

The Third Revolution

Oxford University Press: In The Third Revolution, eminent China scholar Elizabeth C. Economy provides an incisive look at the transformative changes underway in China today. Chinese leader Xi Jinping has unleashed a powerful set of political and economic reforms: the centralization of power under Xi, himself; the expansion of the Communist Party’s role in Chinese political, social, and economic life; and the construction of a virtual wall of regulations to control more closely the exchange of ideas and capital between China and the outside world. Beyond its borders, Beijing has recast itself as a great power, seeking to reclaim its past glory and to create a system of international norms that better serves its more ambitious geostrategic objectives. In so doing, the Chinese leadership is reversing the trends toward greater political and economic opening, as well as the low-profile foreign policy, that had been put in motion by Deng Xiaoping’s “Second Revolution” 30 years earlier.

Through a wide-ranging exploration of Xi Jinping’s top political, economic, and foreign policy priorities—fighting corruption, managing the Internet, reforming the state-owned enterprise sector, improving the country’s innovation capacity, enhancing air quality, and elevating China’s presence on the global stage—Economy identifies the tensions, shortcomings, and successes of Xi’s reform efforts over the course of his first five years in office. She also assesses their implications for the rest of the world, and provides recommendations for how the United States and others should navigate their relationship with this vast nation in the coming years.

Book Review: 

Review: China Experts Enter Their Own “New Era”,” Christopher Beddor, Reuters Breakingviews, (April 27, 2018)

 

Related Reading:

China’s New Revolution,” Elizabeth C. Economy, Foreign Affairs, May 2018

On GPS: Xi and China's ‘Third Revolution’,” Fareed Zakaria, CNN, March 2, 2018

The Implications Of China Eradicating Presidential Term Limits,” Ailsa Chang, NPR, February 26, 2018

 

Author’s Recommendations:

The Governance of China, Xi Jinping (Shanghai Press, 2015)

China Goes Global: The Partial Power, David Shambaugh (Oxford University Press, 2013)

China: Fragile Superpower, Susan L. Shirk (Oxford University Press, 2008)