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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 […]
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 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 | November 8, 2018
<p><strong>China's middle class: We're being picked like leeks by the government</strong> (November 4, 2018, <em>CNN</em>) Wang is one of millions of Chinese middle-class men and women who grew up in a roaring economy… but the past year has been especially tough.</p>
Supporting Article
Life in the Underground Catholic Church
[…] have been detained by authorities multiple times. More information about them is available in the Political Prisoner Database of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China: Jia Zhiguo, record number 2004-05304, accessed July 5, 2024: <a href="https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2004-05304" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2004-05304</a>. Shao Zhumin, record number 2005-00232, accessed July 5, 2024, <a href="https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2005-00232" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2005-00232. </a>See also, […]
December 5, 2013
<p>A Pastors Reflections on the Asian Church Leaders Forum (December 2, 2013, Chinese Church Voices)</p> <p>In June of this year, church leaders from all over Asia gathered in Seoul, South Korea for the Asian Church Leaders Forum. In attendance were many Chinese pastors who had been denied permission by the Chinese government to attend the […]
View From the Wall
A Field Study of “The Church of Almighty God” Cult
[…] groups. In the early l990s, China’s economic transformation resulted in a great migration into the cities resulting in the spread of Christianity to city dwellers. The increasing number of Christians in urban areas became the major source of growth for the total number of Christians. About the same time, Eastern Lightning, in rural Henan, […]
Chinese Christianity Endures, Part 2
Learning from the 18th-Century Church Under Authoritarian Rule
[…] 1724 proscription are highlighted, revealing some important lessons for China workers striving to serve faithfully in New Era China. First, as Mungello makes quite clear, when the number of ordained expatriate priests and missionaries working in China decreased, Chinese Catholics stepped into the gap. In Sichuan this shift was undeniable: by 1800 there remained […]
The Tricolor Religious Market and the Growth of Christianity
The Great Awakening in China (3)
[…] they refused to join the official Christian association that is in the religious red market. Some of the jiating churches began to form new denominations. In the last four or five years, the party-state has imposed stricter restrictions, shut down hundreds of jiating churches, and jailed some prominent pastors and lay leaders. In spite […]
October 18, 2012
[…] of the Chinese police, and the still-debilitating aftereffects of Maos Cultural Revolution.Changing China seen from the ‘hard seats’ of a train (October 12, 2012, BBC)Travelling with a cheap rail ticket provides a snapshot of any country’s underbelly. Doing it twice at an interval of 26 years, in a country like China, provides a fascinating […]