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Lead Article
Chinese Children at Risk
[…] have laid a foundation and set a precedent. Orphanage management, leery of allowing outside assistance into their sites, can be pointed back to successful teamwork at a number of high- profile Chinese orphanages. More Western and Chinese workers are needed to help meet the needs in the vast rural areas of China. Chinese persons […]
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 […]
December 5, 2013
[…] policymakers call capture, a condition in which economic or security dependence of one country on another allows the more powerful to drive the others policy making. US airlines warned to stay out of China's new air defense zone (+video) (November 30, 2013, Christian Science Monitor) The US and Japan are defying China by sending […]
ZGBriefs | November 19, 2015
<h2></h2> <p><strong>Government Enlists NGOs to Help Homeless</strong> (November 18, 2015, <em>China File</em>)<br /> Wang and her colleagues are visiting Chen as social workers from a non-governmental organization called Ruifeng Social Service Center. Every Thursday evening, they take to the streets to find homeless people who need help. Tonight, they’re caring for Chen.</p>
Supporting Article
China’s Christian County
The Lisu of Fugong
[…] special brewery and cannot be made at home or in the field. ^ As these writers interviewed Christians in the field, similar comments were expressed: it is cheaper to believe in Christ than traditional gods. One of the writers (Chan) had also heard similar comments in other parts of rural China in recent years. […]
January 24, 2013
<p>In China, Widening Discontent Among the Communist Party Faithful (January 19, 2013, The New York Times) </p> <p>For years, many China observers have asserted that the partys authoritarian system endures because ordinary Chinese buy into a grand bargain: the party guarantees economic growth, and in exchange the people do not question the way the party rules. […]
May 1, 2014
[…] find to the local Bureau of Cultural Relics. Why some English words are controversial in China (April 30, 2014, BBC) Nowadays, if you eavesdrop on Chinese people's phone conversations, it is commonplace to hear English phrases popping up here and there, like "Okay", "Cool" and "Bye bye". In today's Chinese publications, English abbreviations and […]
October 17, 2013
<p>From the Global Times: Estranged Brethren (October 16, 2013, Chinese Church Voices)</p> <p>On October 10, 2013, the Global Times, one of Chinas English language daily newspapers published an article titled Estranged Brethren, about the division between the official Three-Self church and the House Church movement. Articles about religion in general, and Christianity in particular, are […]
ZGBriefs | August 6, 2015
[…] / Trade / Business Chinese Textile Mills Are Now Hiring in Places Where Cotton Was King (August 2, 2015, The New York Times) Once the epitome of cheap mass manufacturing, textile producers from formerly low-cost nations are starting to set up shop in America. It is part of a blurring of once seemingly clear-cut […]
ZGBriefs | February 1, 2018
[…] (actual picture above) was only a child when he changed my life AND he was not the sole life-changer. There were others. A black pleather book bag, some cheap wooden shoes, and a one peso coin from the Phillippines, just to name a few. Books A Winter Reading Recommendation (January 26, 2018, ChinaSource Blog) Timothy Conkling […]