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ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | September 12, 2019

[…] where Zhang competes with other hunters to find precious rocks. Why Chinese are traveling to Africa, and why Africans are traveling to China (September 9, 2019, Quartz Africa) Direct airline flights between Africa and China have jumped over 600% in the past decade. Planes today are not only full of workers and traders seeking prosperity, but also short-term […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | June 11, 2015

<p></p> <p><strong>Mao As Church Father</strong> (June 1, 2015, <em>First Things</em>)<br /> In a brief review of recent Asian Church history (From Every Tribe and Nation), Mark Noll makes the arresting comment that “Mao Zedong counts as one of the most significant figures in modern church history.” Noll hastens to add this was not Mao's intention; rather, […]

Blog Entries

The COVID-Era Preflight Checklist

[…] longer flight time or the total length but the ongoing uncertainty and inability to plan much beyond the next step. Pre-COVID international travel involved finding and booking cheap, convenient flights and making sure our passports and visas were in order. Currently there are only 18 flights per week between China and the United States […]

Supporting Article

The Future of Business as Mission in China

[…] do this for more than two years. However, with China building miles and miles of high-speed trains crisscrossing hundreds of cities across China, the increasing availability of cheap local flights, national phone calls becoming cheaper and the increase of Internet access (now approaching one-third of Chinese homes), many people are more willing to live […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs Newsletter for May 10, 2012

[…] use an e-passport that is lost or stolen,” said Tang Lei, head of e-passport management for Beijing Public Security Bureau’s exit-entry administration. Price of some high-speed train tickets to be cut (May 9, 2012, China Daily) Passengers will soon enjoy discounts when buying business class tickets and premium seats on high-speed trains operating on […]

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ZGBriefs The Weeks Top Picks, June 26 Issue

[…] type, 3.cn. Check out 4399.com to see one of China’s first and largest online gaming websites. Buy and sell used cars at 92.com. Want to purchase train tickets? It’s as easy as 12306.cn. Why the preference for digits over letters? It mostly has to do with ease of memorization. To a native English-speaker, remembering […]

ZGBriefs

July 17, 2014

[…] of investigative reporting in 2011, estimates that the number of journalists responsible for "independent, public-interest, negative or sensitive" reports has fallen by 66 per cent in the last three years. Lord of the Flies (July 17, 2014, Tea Leaf Nation) But below the radar is another parallel push to rid the Chinese Communist Partys […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs Newsletter for April 26, 2012

[…] demography. An upside-down pyramid (April 23, 2012, The Economist) OUR correspondents discuss the impact that China’s ageing population could have on its economy. ‘The service sucks’: Chinese airlines under fire (April 23, 2012, Sydney Morning Herald) Chinese airlines are struggling to stick with schedules as they contend with military restrictions on airspace, bad weather […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | August 8, 2024

[…] are hundreds of wet markets all over Shanghai, and they have proved remarkably resilient. Though they’re hardly relaxing places to shop, they offer customers access to fresh, cheap produce within a few minutes’ walk of their homes. But the city is now giving the markets a much-needed upgrade, aiming not only to improve hygiene […]

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Hearing from the Church in China, Part 2

Trying to “Keep the Flies Out”

[…] effect, as it prohibits sharing any information related to the national security of China, a term which has experienced a considerable broadening in its definition over the last years: A report entitled “‘Comprehensive National Security’ Unleashed: How Xi’s Approach Shapes China’s Policies at Home and Abroad” summarizes this development and called it the “securitization […]