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ZGBriefs

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

ZGBriefs | September 12, 2019

Held on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, the Mid-Autumn Festival is one of the most important Chinese festivals. On this day, people reunite with their families and eat mooncakes.

Peoples of China

China’s New Social Class

People's Entrepreneurs

[…] society. The main reason these businessmen are attracting attention is their huge wealth. In every sectormanufacturing, energy, real estate, steel, IT, retail, finance, agriculture and so onthe number one entrepreneur is valued at several tens of billions of yuan, and to a large degree they influence the existence and development of these businesses. Compared […]

ZGBriefs

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 […]

Blog Entries

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 […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | November 8, 2018

[…] released earlier this month, more of China’s rich live in the capital of Beijing than in Shanghai, and the Southern tech powerhouse of Shenzhen is close behind. China's Number of Births Just Keeps Dropping  (November 1, 2018, The Diplomat) The birth rate did see a bump in 2016, the first year the new policy was […]

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 | January 14, 2016

[…] 100 years old. Powerball Craze Hits China (But There's a Catch) (January 13, 2016, NBC) Powerball fever reached China on Wednesday as wannabe billionaires rushed to buy tickets from online entrepreneurs. A handful of U.S-based sellers on popular Chinese e-commerce site Taobao were offering $2 tickets for around 20-30 yuan ($3-$4.60) each. Economics / […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | February 2, 2017

[…] Sixth Tone) “Urban villages” are once-rural communities that have been surrounded by urbanization. In recent years, many such villages in cities around China have been transformed into cheap housing for migrant workers, but municipal governments have been demolishing them at a steady pace to replace the ramshackle houses with more modern, and more valuable, […]

ZGBriefs

August 23, 2012

[…] place in cities across China after Japanese nationalists raised their country’s flag on disputed islands. Thousands of people took to the streets in Shenzhen, Guangzhou and a number of other cities demanding that Japan leave the islands in the East China Sea. In Shenzhen, some demonstrators attacked Japanese restaurants and smashed Japanese-made cars. The […]