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Skip to main content ChinaFile Toggle navigation Search * Reporting & Opinion * Conversation * Library * Multimedia * Topics * Contributors Culture Environment Features Green Space Media Postcard Viewpoint Caixin Media Earthbound China My First Trip Out of School Two Way Street Books Excerpts Reports China in the World Podcast Sinica Podcast The China Africa Project The NYRB China Archive Depth of Field Infographics Photo Gallery Video Viral Videos Arts Energy Law Religion Society Business Environment Media Rural Life Technology Economy Health Military Science Urban Life Education History Politics Zhou Na Max Duncan Isabel Hilton James Palmer * Robert Daly * Yuyang Liu * Zha Jianying * Ian Johnson See All * (AFP/Getty Images) WHEN WILL CHINA GET OFF COAL? A CHINAFILE CONVERSATION Lauri Myllyvirta, Alex Wang & more via ChinaFile Conversation As China looks to meet its energy demands, there has been a rush for coal, with prices hitting record highs in October. Despite pledges by Beijing to pull back from fossil fuels, the power crisis has exposed shortfalls in the country’s ability to meet its manufacturing needs. Can China ever hope to meet its energy needs without relying on dangerous fossil fuels? What are the implications for the global effort to combat climate change? Read full story>> * Noel Celis—AFP/Getty Images THE CCP’S CULTURE OF FEAR Perry Link via New York Review of Books One way to measure China’s urge to transform itself is to note how often the word new has been used by Chinese leaders. In 1902, the concept of the “new citizen” took hold in Liang Qichao’s New Citizen Journal. 20 years later, the May Fourth Movement came to be known as the New Culture Movement. In 1934, Chiang Kai-shek launched his New Life Movement. The Communist takeover in 1949 was the advent of New China, and the Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s touted a “new socialist man.” After Mao... Read full story>> * Greg Baker—AFP/Getty Images TIGHTENING UP A CHINAFILE CONVERSATION Xibai Xu, Jude Blanchette & more via ChinaFile Conversation In what many observers have termed a “regulatory crackdown,” a wave of new legal restrictions and bans on business, technology, and entertainment has broken across China over the past several months, with what appears to be escalating velocity and force. Their rapid enactment has led many analysts—including those connected to the Chinese state—to view them as part of a single campaign. What is the best way to understand the connections among these new strictures? How do they relate to Xi... Read full story>> * CHINAFILE PRESENTS: IN THE CAMPS—CHINA’S HIGH-TECH PENAL COLONY VIDEO AND TRANSCRIPT Darren Byler, Susan Jakes & more Darren Byler joined ChinaFile’s Susan Jakes and Jessica Batke to discuss his new book, In the Camps: China’s High-Tech Penal Colony. Evidence has mounted in recent years that China’s government has incarcerated more than one million Uyghurs and members of other ethnic and religious minorities in a network of detention facilities across Xinjiang, while subjecting millions of others in the region to severe religious and cultural repression and an unprecedented level of technologically enhanced... Read full story>> * Timothy A. Clary—AFP/Getty Images THE MAN BEHIND XI JINPING’S FOREIGN POLICY AN EXCERPT FROM ‘CHINA’S CIVILIAN ARMY: THE MAKING OF WOLF WARRIOR DIPLOMACY’ Peter Martin The daunting task of keeping up with Xi Jinping’s foreign policy ambitions fell to Wang Yi. Born in Beijing in 1953, the same year as Xi, Wang also spent a good chunk of his adolescence as a “sent down” youth during the Cultural Revolution, when he spent eight years laboring on a farm in the northeast. Always a harder worker than others, Wang taught himself literature and history, a former classmate told the Christian Science Monitor. He was “quite open minded. He did not just accept what he... Read full story>> * Sam Yeh—AFP/Getty Images HOW COULD THE U.S. DETER MILITARY CONFLICT IN THE TAIWAN STRAIT? A CHINAFILE CONVERSATION Daniel R. Russel, Shelley Rigger & more via ChinaFile Conversation Last week, China flew 24 warplanes into Taiwan’s air defense identification zone. One of the largest incursions in recent years, the People’s Liberation Army flyover came a day after Taipei applied to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership. Beijing, which applied to the trade pact a week earlier, has opposed Taiwan’s bid. In response, Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement branding China an “arch criminal” bent on increasing hostilities across the... Read full story>> * (TPG—Getty Images) ‘CHINA’S SEARCH FOR A MODERN IDENTITY HAS ENTERED A NEW AND PERILOUS PHASE’ Roger Garside In 1980, writing the last paragraph of the last chapter of Coming Alive: China After Mao, I declared that China was moving “from totalitarian tyranny to a system more humane, part of a struggle by this nation to free itself from a straitjacket woven of feudalism, Marxism-Leninism, and twentieth-century technology.” In 2020, 40 years later, in China Coup: The Great Leap to Freedom, I describe a China firmly in the grip of totalitarian tyranny. In the years between, there were periods of... Read full story>> * Kevin Frayer—Getty Images HOW MUCH DOES BEIJING CONTROL THE ETHNIC MAKEUP OF TIBET? Andrew M. Fischer The idea of swamping, which the Dalai Lama himself elaborated in 2008, holds that China’s government has been seeking to solve its problems in Tibet and other “ethnic minority” areas such as Xinjiang by turning local indigenous ethnic groups (such as Tibetans or Uyghurs) into minorities in their own land through a coordinated program of Han Chinese in-migration, like settler colonialism in the Americas or Australasia. China’s 2020 National Population Census allows us to assess the concerns... Read full story>> * (AFP—Getty Images) OVERSEAS NGOS AND FOUNDATIONS AND COVID IN CHINA USING A SECURITIZED FRAMEWORK IN A TIME OF CRISIS Mark Sidel via The European Institute for Chinese Studies (EURICS) The COVID crisis that enveloped Wuhan, Hubei province, and some other parts of China in late 2019 and early 2020 might, in another era, have encouraged China to temporarily relax constraints on international aid and engagement. In the current Chinese political environment, such relaxation of constraints wasn’t going to happen. China accepted some overseas aid at the beginning of the COVID crisis, but almost entirely on the restrictive political and legal terms laid down in the Overseas NGO Law... Read full story>> 1. 1 2. 2 3. 3 4. 4 5. 5 6. 6 7. 7 8. 8 9. 9 * Previous * Next RECENT STORIES FEATURES 05.03.21 NEW DATA SHOW HONG KONG’S NATIONAL SECURITY ARRESTS FOLLOW A PATTERN Lydia Wong & Thomas Kellogg In the nine months since the Hong Kong National Security Law was passed, more than 90 people have been arrested under the new legislation. Though they have been charged with various breaches of national security ranging from inciting secession to... VIEWPOINT 09.09.21 A FAREWELL TO MY STUDENTS Xu Zhangrun & Geremie R. Barmé Xu Zhangrun addresses this letter to the students and young scholars who participated in “The Three Talents Salon” which Xu founded in 2003, a biannual symposium devoted to fostering “three talents” or skills in the participants: in-depth reading,... FEATURES 10.30.20 STATE OF SURVEILLANCE Jessica Batke & Mareike Ohlberg Across China, in its most crowded cities and tiniest hamlets, government officials are on an unprecedented surveillance shopping spree. The coordination of the resulting millions of cameras and other snooping technology spread across the country... FEATURES 12.21.20 PRETTY LADY CADRES Shen Lu In early February, at the beginning of the outbreak of the deadly COVID-19 virus in China, Wang Fang, a local Communist Party secretary, was working around the clock. As an official responsible for 19,000 residents of a neighborhood in the city of... FEATURES 12.20.20 MESSAGE CONTROL Jessica Batke & Mareike Ohlberg Li Wenliang’s death had only been announced a few hours earlier, but Warming High-Tech was already on the case. The company had been monitoring online mentions of the COVID-whistleblower’s name in the several days since police had detained and... PHOTOGRAPHY & VIDEO PHOTO GALLERY 03.05.20 CHINA’S NEW DESERTS Ian Teh From Madoi county, a settlement near the headwaters of the Yellow River, our two-car convoy headed out to visit a desert Yang Yong had first viewed through binoculars in 1997. From the roadside, the geologist had seen a small, wind-blown patch of... PHOTO GALLERY 02.21.20 ‘THEY FEEL LIKE THEY CAN’T GO HOME’ Ali & Muyi Xiao In September 2014, while waiting for access to photograph Syrian refugee camps in Jordan, a Chinese photographer who calls himself “Ali” came upon a large group of students from his home country at a local restaurant. He knew that many young Chinese... DEPTH OF FIELD 12.31.19 ‘NOWHERE TO DOCK’ Ye Ming, Yan Cong & more from Yuanjin Photo In 2019, Depth of Field showcased stories covering a range of topics: Shi Yangkun’s nostaglic exploration of China’s last collective villages, Zhu Lingyu’s careful and artisitic portrayal of survivors of sexual violence, and cities seen through the... PHOTO GALLERY 09.13.19 SEARCHING FOR HOME Peng Ke & Yangyang Cheng Balloons over a wire fence, plastic toys hanging from a man-made rock, a few printed tiles on a wall, a pink sleep shirt with a sketch of a butterfly and dandelions: Peng’s photos capture the colorful glimmers of modest, unabashed desire. She seems... PHOTO GALLERY 07.24.19 ‘I LOVE HK BUT HATE IT AT THE SAME TIME’ Todd R. Darling A central issue many of the Hong Kong people in my portraits are wrestling with is how to define an identity and being challenged in that pursuit by cultural, social, or political pressures. There is a lot of frustration and anger over the recent... PHOTO GALLERY 05.17.19 SURFACE TENSION Xu Song “I never realized that so many Chinese people have tattoos,” says photographer Xu Song, who spent the summers of 2014, 2015, and 2016 photographing people at outdoor swimming pools in Beijing with his phone. “When the clothes come off, the secrets... BOOKS BOOKS 04.09.20 THE MYTH OF CHINESE CAPITALISM Dexter Roberts St. Martin’s Press: Dexter Roberts explores the reality behind today’s financially-ascendant China and pulls the curtain back on how the Chinese manufacturing machine is actually powered. He focuses on two places: the village of Binghuacun in Guizhou province, one of China’s poorest regions that sends the highest proportion of its youth away; and Dongguan, China’s most infamous factory town located in Guangdong, home to both the largest number of migrant workers and the country’s biggest manufacturing base.Within these two towns and the people that move between them, Roberts focuses on the story of the Mo family, former farmers-turned-migrant-workers who are struggling to make a living in a fast-changing country that relegates half of its people to second-class status via household registration, land tenure policies, and inequality in education and health care systems.Roberts brings to life the problems migrant workers face today as they attempt to overcome a divisive system that poses a serious challenge to the country’s future development. BOOKS 03.24.20 VERNACULAR INDUSTRIALISM IN CHINA Eugenia Lean Columbia University Press: In early 20th-century China, Chen Diexian (1879-1940) was a maverick entrepreneur—at once a prolific man of letters, captain of industry, magazine editor, and cosmetics magnate. He tinkered with chemistry in his private studio, used local cuttlefish to source magnesium carbonate, and published manufacturing tips in how-to columns. In a rapidly changing society, Chen copied foreign technologies and translated manufacturing processes from abroad to produce adaptations of global commodities that bested foreign brands. Engaging in the worlds of journalism, industry, and commerce, he drew on literati practices associated with late-imperial elites but deployed them in novel ways within a culture of educated tinkering that generated industrial innovation.Through the lens of Chen’s career, Eugenia Lean explores how unlikely individuals devised unconventional, homegrown approaches to industry and science in early 20th-century China. She contends that Chen’s activities exemplify “vernacular industrialism,” the pursuit of industry and science outside of conventional venues, often involving ad hoc forms of knowledge and material work. Lean shows how vernacular industrialists accessed worldwide circuits of law and science and experimented with local and global processes of manufacturing to navigate, innovate, and compete in global capitalism. In doing so, they presaged the approach that has helped fuel China’s economic ascent in the 21st century. Rather than conventional narratives that depict China as belatedly borrowing from Western technology, Vernacular Industrialism in China offers a new understanding of industrialization, going beyond material factors to show the central role of culture and knowledge production in technological and industrial change.{chop} REPORTS REPORTS 09.01.17 THE COSTS OF INTERNATIONAL ADVOCACY Human Rights Watch Even as it engages with U.N. human rights institutions, China has worked consistently and often aggressively to silence criticism of its human rights record before U.N. bodies and has taken actions aimed at weakening some of the central mechanisms... REPORTS 05.24.17 CHINA’S SOCIAL CREDIT SYSTEM: A BIG-DATA ENABLED APPROACH TO MARKET REGULATION WITH BROAD IMPLICATIONS FOR DOING BUSINESS IN CHINA Mirjam Meissner Mirjam Meissner Mercator Institute for China Studies Under the catchphrase “Social Credit System,” China is currently implementing a new and highly innovative approach to monitoring, rating, and regulating the behavior of market participants. The Social Credit System will have significant impact on... MORE CHINAFILE STORIES CAIXIN MEDIA THE CHINA AFRICA PROJECT MEDIA CAIXIN MEDIA VIEWPOINT MY FIRST TRIP PARTNERS * Reporting & Opinion * Conversation * Library * Multimedia * About * Contact * Donate Sign up for our newsletter. | | | | ChinaFile ChinaFile is a project of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at Asia Society. Center on U.S.-China Relations, © 2011-2016. All Rights Reserved. Back to Top ShareThis Copy and Paste