Environment
03.10.16How China’s 13th Five-Year Plan Addresses Energy and the Environment
For the first time ever, a senior Chinese leader announced in his work report to the National People’s Congress—his most important formal speech of the year—that environmental violators and those who fail to report such violations will be “severely...
ChinaFile Recommends
03.07.16Q. and A.: How China’s National People’s Congress Works
New York Times
The annual session of China’s legislature, the National People’s Congress, is intended to convey the image of a transparent, responsive government.
ChinaFile Recommends
03.07.16In Xi Jinping’s Tears, a Message for China’s People
New York Times
It’s all right to cry, even when you’re the leader of the world’s most populous nation.
ChinaFile Recommends
03.07.16China Corruption Crackdown ‘Netted 300,000 in 2015’
BBC
China's ruling Communist Party says it punished nearly 300,000 officials last year for corruption.
Media
03.04.16China’s Coming Ideological Wars
For most Chinese, the 1990s were a period of intense material pragmatism. Economic development was the paramount social and political concern, while the various state ideologies that had guided policy during the initial decades of the People’s...
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03.04.16Chinese Propaganda Machine Places Hopes in Cartoon Rappers
Associated Press
What's the world's largest propaganda organ to do when it can't get young Chinese to pay attention to the latest Communist Party slogans?
ChinaFile Recommends
03.04.16U.S. Proposes Reviving Naval Coalition to Balance China’s Expansion
New York Times
Chief of the U.S. Pacific Command proposed reviving a coalition that had collapsed because of protests from China.
ChinaFile Recommends
03.04.16Why You Should Care about China's National People's Congress
BBC
It is an opportunity to gauge what Chinese leaders may be thinking about the economy.
Conversation
03.04.16Xi Jinping: A Cult of Personality?
By some accounts, Chinese Presdient Xi Jinping is the most powerful leader the country has had since Mao Zedong. One arrow in his quiver that echoes Mao’s armory is Xi’s embrace of popular song, listened to these days not on the radio or...
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03.03.16Five Things to Know About China’s ‘Two Sessions’
Time
China’s governing class descends on Beijing this week for the nation’s top two annual political meetings.
ChinaFile Recommends
03.03.16Read and delete: How Weibo's censors tackle dissent and free speech
Committee to Protect Journalists
A former employee gives insight into how Weibo balances the demands of government censorship with the need to attract users.
ChinaFile Recommends
03.03.16China’s Xi Jinping Puts Loyalty to the Test at Congress
Wall Street Journal
President focuses on party discipline, as corruption crackdown has unsettled Chinese officials.
ChinaFile Recommends
03.01.16Dodging Critics and Soothing Fears, China Meets Its G-20 Goals
Bloomberg
China pulled off a win at the Shanghai Group of 20 meeting of global finance leaders after months of angst abroad over economic and policy direction.
Media
03.01.16Why China Isn’t Hosting Syrian Refugees
The civil war in Syria, now spanning almost half a decade, and the Islamic State’s territorial advances there have led to the world’s worst refugee crisis in decades. More than 4.7 million Syrians have left their homeland, pouring into neighboring...
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02.29.16China Will Set Plan for Raising Retirement Age Next Year: Media
Reuters
China, whose state pension fund is under pressure to break even, will formalize a plan in 2017 to raise the official retirement age.
ChinaFile Recommends
02.29.16China Warns U.S. After Trump Wins Nevada Caucus
Washington Free Beacon
China warned the U.S. not to adopt punitive currency policies that could disrupt U.S.-China relations after Donald Trump’s win in the Nevada caucus.
ChinaFile Recommends
02.26.16Chinese Censors Have Taken a Popular Gay Drama Offline and Viewers Aren’t Happy
Time
Online discussions garnered more than 110 million responses within a day of the show's cancelation.
ChinaFile Recommends
02.26.16U.S. and China Agree on Proposal for Tougher North Korea Sanctions
New York Times
The two countries reached a resolution after intense negotiations over the last seven weeks.
Viewpoint
02.25.16A Looming Crisis for China’s Legal System
In China, politics continues to control law. The current leadership has rejected many of the universal legal values that China accepted—at least in principle—under communist rule in some earlier eras. Today, for example, to talk freely about...
Books
02.23.16The Diplomacy of Migration
During the Cold War, both Chinese and American officials employed a wide range of migration policies and practices to pursue legitimacy, security, and prestige. They focused on allowing or restricting immigration, assigning refugee status, facilitating student exchanges, and enforcing deportations. The Diplomacy of Migration focuses on the role these practices played in the relationship between the United States and the Republic of China both before and after the move to Taiwan. Meredith Oyen identifies three patterns of migration diplomacy: migration legislation as a tool to achieve foreign policy goals, migrants as subjects of diplomacy and propaganda, and migration controls that shaped the Chinese American community.Using sources from diplomatic and governmental archives in the United States, the Republic of China on Taiwan, the People’s Republic of China, and the United Kingdom, Oyen applies a truly transnational perspective. The Diplomacy of Migration combines important innovations in the field of diplomatic history with new international trends in migration history to show that even though migration issues were often considered “low stakes” or “low risk” by foreign policy professionals concerned with Cold War politics and the nuclear age, they were neither “no risk” nor unimportant to larger goals. Instead, migration diplomacy became a means of facilitating other foreign policy priorities, even when doing so came at great cost for migrants themselves. —Cornell University Press{chop}Correction: Meredith Oyen’s employer was misidentified in an earlier version of this video. She is an Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Conversation
02.23.16How Long Can China’s Internet Thrive if the Rest of the World Gets Shut Out?
Last week, Chinese authorities announced that as of March 10, foreign-invested companies would not be allowed to publish anything on the Chinese Internet unless they have obtained government permission to publish with a Chinese partner. What does...
Sinica Podcast
02.22.16Allegiance
from Sinica Podcast
Kaiser and Jeremy recorded today’s show from New York, where they waylaid Holly Chang, founder of Project Pengyou and now Acting Executive Director of the Committee of 100, for a discussion on spying, stealing commercial spying, spying, and Broadway...
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02.22.16China Signals no South China Sea Backdown as Foreign Minister Goes to U.S.
Reuters
Beijing has rattled nerves with construction and reclamation activities on the islands it occupies.
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02.22.16China’s Excess Production Has Intensified Slowdown, Business Group Says
New York Times
The failure of Chinese leaders to tackle the problem of excess industrial production has intensified an economic slowdown.
Media
02.19.16New Video Celebrates Chinese Missiles With Old-School Communist Pomp
Trumpets sound and trombones blare as a warhead launches. Intercontinental ballistic missiles mounted on trucks parade down the center of a boulevard crowded with bystanders. “We are the glorious Rocket Force,” a mixed choir sings in a Soviet-...
Conversation
02.18.16‘Rule by Fear?’
In the just over three years since Xi Jinping assumed leadership of China, observers and scholars of the country have increasingly coalesced around the idea that Xi’s term in office has coincided with a shift in the tone, if not the practice, of...
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02.17.16Why Did China Kidnap Its Provocateurs?
New Yorker
China’s harsh treatment of its critics is notorious, but the recent abductions of five booksellers and a journalist have sparked international condemnation and heated protests.
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02.17.16Obama to Veto Bill to Rename Washington Street After Jailed China Dissident
Washington Post
Liu Xiaobo, who in 2009 was sentenced to 11 years in jail on charges of inciting state subversion.
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02.12.16Senate Approves New North Korea Sanctions
CNN
The Senate approved sanctions against North Korea for carrying out missile tests, cybersecurity attacks and human rights abuses.
The China Africa Project
02.11.16China’s Risky Gamble to Become a Major Player in the Middle East and North Africa
Chinese president Xi Jinping’s three-country tour of the Middle East and North Africa offers yet another example of Beijing’s expanding drive for increased global influence. During his first visit to the region, Xi traveled to Saudi Arabia, Egypt,...
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02.10.16Invisible Bridges: Life Along the Chinese-Russian Border
New Yorker
Is the new friendship between Russia and China real?
ChinaFile Recommends
02.10.16Will China Take Kim Jong-Un's Insult Lying Down?
Newsweek
North Korea has conducted a nuclear weapon test and an intercontinental ballistic missile test as Beijing tries to repair frayed ties with Pyongyang.
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02.10.16Where Are All the Women in China’s Anticorruption Campaign?
Council on Foreign Relations
Women make up just over 2 percent of the “tigers” brought down by corruption.
Conversation
02.09.16What New Approach Should the U.S. and China Take to North Korea?
On Sunday, North Korea launched a long range rocket many see as a test of its capability to launch a missile attack against the U.S., defying both American and Chinese pressure not do so. Republican U.S. presidential candidates argued Washington...
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02.09.16China’s Message to Dissenters: Flee If You Dare
USA Today
Recent months have seen an unprecedented expansion of China’s power to snatch up detractors across borders.
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02.09.16Q. and A.: Yan Xuetong Urges China to Adopt a More Assertive Foreign Policy
New York Times
Director at Tsinghua University advocates "moral realism" as China challenges the US for world leadership.
The NYRB China Archive
02.09.16Why Are Tibetans Setting Themselves on Fire?
from New York Review of Books
February 27, 2009, was the third day of Losar, the Tibetan New Year. It was also the day that self-immolation came to Tibet. The authorities had just cancelled a Great Prayer Festival (Monlam) that was supposed to commemorate the victims of the...
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02.09.16Invisible Bridges
New Yorker
Over the past two centuries, there have been periodic tensions between Russia and China, including some serious border conflicts, and historically Russia has usually held the upper hand. But nowadays, at the personal level, Monteleone notices a...
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02.08.16China Struggles for Balance in Response to North Korea’s Boldness
New York Times
North Korea's Kim Jong-un emphatically ignores China’s entreaties to refrain from launching a rocket.
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02.04.16How Japan Sees China’s Island Building Problem
CNBC
Japanese deputy foreign minister said Tokyo views Beijing's seizures and buildup on islands and reefs in the South China Sea as a "problem."
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02.04.16Xi Jinping Assuming New Status as China’s ‘Core’ Leader
New York Times
A new push to praise him as China’s “core” leader, a term resonant with the formidable stature once held by Deng Xiaoping, suggests that his steely quest for dominance is not over.
Conversation
02.02.16How Close Was the Latest Close Call in the South China Sea?
Had things in fact calmed down in recent weeks as the Chinese official press claimed, only to be stirred up again needlessly by another Freedom of Navigation sail by the U.S. Navy?
Caixin Media
02.01.16Tough Times call for Tougher Reform Push
Beijing has has done a good job in terms of industrializing the country but will face unprecedented challenges when dealing with a service-driven economy.
Reports
02.01.16Xi Jinping on the Global Stage
Council on Foreign Relations
Xi Jinping is the most powerful Chinese leader since Deng Xiaoping, and with his sweeping actions and ambitious directives he has fundamentally altered the process by which China’s domestic and foreign policy is formulated and implemented. Xi’s...
Media
01.29.16‘The New Yorker’ on China
Following is an edited transcript of a live event hosted at Asia Society New York on December 17, 2015, “ChinaFile Presents: The New Yorker On China.” (The full video appears above.) The evening, introduced by Asia Society President Josette Sheeran...
Media
01.29.16‘I Don't Want to Think About Activating Change’
from Asia Blog
In 2012, The New York Times published a groundbreaking investigative report showing that the family of Wen Jiabao, China’s then-prime minister, possessed wealth in excess of $2.7 billion. In response, the Chinese government blocked the Times’...
Viewpoint
01.28.16The Trouble with Hong Kong’s Chief Executives
On January 14, the trial of Sir Donald Tsang, Hong Kong’s former chief executive who served from 2005 to 2012, was set for January 3 of 2017. This past December, Tsang pleaded not guilty to two counts of misconduct in public office, charges on which...
Conversation
01.27.16Is George Soros Right that China’s Headed for a Hard Landing?
On Tuesday in an article headlined, “Declaring War on China’s Currency? Ha ha,” the People’s Daily attacked billionaire investor George Soros for suggesting he might short the renminbi. The Chinese currency has dropped 5.7 percent since August when...
The NYRB China Archive
01.26.16China: Surviving the Camps
from New York Review of Books
By now, it has been nearly forty years since the Cultural Revolution officially ended, yet in China, considering the magnitude and significance of the event, it has remained a poorly examined, under-documented subject. Official archives are off-...
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01.25.16China Deepens Its Footprint in Iran After Lifting Sanctions
New York Times
Both countries agreed to increase trade to $600 billion in the coming decade.
The NYRB China Archive
01.22.16‘My Personal Vendetta’
from New York Review of Books
The presumed kidnapping of the Hong Kong bookseller and British citizen Lee Bo late last year has brought international attention to the challenges faced by the Hong Kong publishing business. During a break from The New York Review’s conference on...
Viewpoint
01.21.16After a Landslide Election, Now Comes the Hard Part for Taiwan's President
Taiwan elected its first woman president on Saturday in a landslide victory that brought a nominally pro-independence party back to power after eight years in opposition.Tsai Ing-wen led her Democratic Progressive Party to a thumping victory,...
Conversation
01.20.16Beijing’s Televised Confessions
Recent days have seen two more in a long string of televised “confessions” on China Central Television, that of Swedish human rights activist Peter Dahlin and Hong Kong bookseller Gui Minhai. Did these gentlemen break any Chinese laws? What do these...
Caixin Media
01.19.16Why China Doesn’t Publish Fatal Train Crash Data
Disputes between the two agencies running the trains in China over how to classify and publish details on fatal railroad incidents has kept reports on some fatal accidents last year from surfacing, people close to the matter say. Several employees...
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01.19.16Wang Qishan, China’s Anti-Corruption Tsar
Financial Times
The anti-corruption drive has been the central policy of this administration and its duration and severity have surprised almost everyone, not least the bureaucrats who have been its primary targets.
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01.19.16For U.S, Taiwan Vote Changes Calculus over 'One China'
Wall Street Journal
Washington less likely to indulge Beijing over its policy after victory of island’s pro-independence party
Postcard
01.18.16A People’s Friendship
It takes a brave man to jump off a moving train for the sake of a sale, but the clothes hawkers had the easy courage of men who did this on the regular. I watched as they leapt off the front carriage as the train chugged into a station with no stop...