Recent Stories
China: What’s Going Right?
MICHAEL ZHAO, JAMES FALLOWS, ORVILLE SCHELL (& authors)Michael Zhao:On a recent trip to China, meeting mostly with former colleagues at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, I got a dose of optimism and hope for one aspect of the motherland. In terms of science, or laying down a solid foundation for better science to come, things are...
Errors of Aggression Catch up with Underwriter
CAIXINPing An Securities Co. has been slapped with a fine by the securities regulator and will lose its stock underwriting license for three months because of its sloppy work in underwriting the initial public offering of a company that turned out to be a fraud.This is not the first...
China Tops Table for Disaster-Induced Displacement of...
CHINADIALOGUEMore than a third of all people forced from their homes by disasters such as floods, storms, and earthquakes in the past five years were in China, says a new report from the leading international body on displacement.Around 49.8 million Chinese people were displaced by natural...
Chinese Anxiety—In Debate About Overwork, a Glimpse...
TEA LEAF NATIONAlmost half of all Chinese report feeling “more anxiety” now than they did five years ago. What, exactly, is driving these concerns, or increasing reports of these concerns? Avid followers of China-related news might immediately think of censorship and other restrictions on...
The Wall Street Journal: Covering China Past and...
THE EDITORSThe Wall Street Journal was one of the first American publications to set up a bureau in Beijing. Since its establishment, scores of the Journal’s correspondents have traveled in and out of the country to cover China’s economic and political development. On April 30th, 2013,...
Making a Show of the News?
OUYANG BIN, ZHANG XIAORANIn what seemed like a flash on April 20, Chinese netizens dubbed TV reporter Chen Ying “the most beautiful bride” on China’s Internet. It was the day of her wedding but a 7.0 magnitude earthquake hit Ya’an in Sichuan province and Chen didn’t bother to change her clothes...
Sino-American Relations: Amour or Les Miserables?
WINSTON LORDWinston Lord, former United States Ambassador to China, tells us he recently hacked into the temples of government, pecking at his first-generation iPad with just one finger—a clear sign that both Beijing and Washington need to beef...
There Goes the Neighborhood
SUN YUNFAN, LEAH THOMPSONWhen, in 1996, art historian Nancy Berliner purchased a late Qing dynasty merchants’ house from Huangcun, a village in Anhui province, it was just one ordinary house among thousands like it in the picturesque Huizhou region of China. It took Berliner seven years to oversee the...
Editors’ Picks
For Many in China, the One Child Policy is Already...
LESLIE T. CHANGBefore getting pregnant with her second child, Lu Qingmin went to the family-planning office to apply for a birth permit. Officials in her husband’s Hunan village where she was living turned her down, but she had the baby anyway. She may eventually be fined $1,600—about what...
Struggling with Antonioni
ISABEL HILTONMy first sight of Beijing was puzzling. It was October 1973, at the end of a very long flight, and the city seemed so dark I could hardly believe we had arrived. In those days, flights to China were not allowed to cross Soviet airspace—the two countries had fallen out at...
The Lesser Wall
MICHAEL MEYERThere is no such place as Manchuria, but the word still resonates like a bell struck a century before. The region is now more prosaically called dongbei—the northeast—yet its contemporary toponyms sing of its imperial past, when it was the homeland of the Manchu, China’s...
Reports
“Swept Away”: Abuses Against Sex Workers in China
Human Rights WatchHuman Rights Watch believes the Chinese government should take immediate steps to protect the human rights of all people who engage in sex work. It should repeal the host of laws and regulations that are repressive and misused by the police, and end the practice of indiscriminate...
Annual Report to Congress: Military and Security...
United States of America Department of DefenseThe People’s Republic of China (PRC) continues to pursue a long-term, comprehensive military modernization program designed to improve the capacity of its armed forces to fight and win short-duration, high-intensity regional military conflict. Preparing for potential conflict...
Photography and Video
Last Call to Prayer
KATHLEEN MCLAUGHLIN, SHARRON LOVELLChina’s Hui Muslims are unique in many respects. The country’s second-largest ethnic minority share linguistic and cultural ties with the majority in China that have allowed them to practice their religion with less interference and fewer restrictions than others, like Uighur...
Stars in the Haze
JOSHUA FRANKFlying kites is the quintessential Chinese pastime. But “wind zithers” or “paper sparrow hawks,” as they are known in Chinese, also have a long history as tools. Over millennia, Chinese have used them for measuring the wind, gauging distances, and even sending secret...
Around the Web
McDonald’s To Hire 75,000 Staff On Store, McCafe Expansion
The new hiring represents an increase of as much as 83 percent of the Illinois-based company’s workforce in the Asian...
Bloomberg
What Is China’s Arctic Game Plan?
China’s ambitions for the Arctic go beyond resource mining; issues like delineating territory and establishing...
The Atlantic
Kunming Pollution Protest Is Tip Of Rising Chinese Environmental...
The frequency of protests is rising as China’s increasingly affluent and middle-class society becomes more aware of...
Guardian
Chinese Suggestions For Improving Internet Disappear
Thriving microblogging culture has become China’s de facto town square. But as more alleged rumors and critical...










































