ChinaFile Recommends
07.30.14China to Help 100 Million Settle in Cities
Xinhua
China State Council said it plans to help about 100 million people without urban ID records to settle in towns and cities by 2020 in a reform of the nation's household registration, or "hukou," system.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.28.14China’s Leaders Draw Lessons From War of ‘Humiliation’
New York Times
The lessons from the twilight of the Qing Dynasty have become all the more pointed today, when Chinese-Japanese ties are tenser than they have been for decades, and President Xi Jinping of China has embarked on an ambitious program to overhaul the...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.28.14China Needs to Import More Food to Ease Water, Energy Shortages
Reuters
China should boost imports of food so it can dedicate more of its scarce water supplies to energy production, especially in arid but coal-rich regions like Xinjiang and Ningxia
ChinaFile Recommends
07.28.14China Activists Fight Gay ‘Conversion Therapy’
BBC
Gay rights activists in China are preparing for what they say could be a legal milestone in their fight to stop homosexuality being treated as an illness.
Sinica Podcast
07.28.14
Hong Kong Protests and Suicide in China
from Sinica Podcast
This week on Sinica, we’re delighted to welcome back the stalwart Mr. Gady Epstein, Beijing correspondent for The Economist, to discuss the recent protests in Hong Kong, as well as the flux in China’s suicide rates. And specifically, we’ll be...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.26.14Congratulations! Inoculations!
Economist
The World Health Organization gives China a glowing report for its lowering of infant and maternal mortality rates.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.25.14The Most Popular Books in China, and Why
Ozy
Five of China’s best-sellers could give us some telling insights into the nation’s psyche.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.24.14China Manufacturing Gauge Rises to 18-Month High on Stimulus
Bloomberg
A Chinese manufacturing gauge rose to an 18-month high in July, bolstering the government’s chances of meeting its 2014 economic-growth target of about 7.5 percent.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.23.14Dozens Placed in Quarantine After China Plague Death
BBC
Part of a city in north-west China has been sealed off and dozens of people placed in quarantine after a man died of bubonic plague, state media say.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.14Market Reforms, Fight against Corruption Go Hand in Hand, Expert Says
Peking University’s Li Chengyan argues the party is taking a two-pronged approach to reform, and institutional changes at local level will help make anti-graft campaign’s gains permanent.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.14China Food Scandal Spreads, Drags in Starbucks, Burger King and McNuggets in Japan
Reuters
McDonald’s Corp and KFC’s parent Yum Brands Inc apologized to Chinese customers on Monday after it emerged that Shanghai Husi Food Co Ltd, a unit of U.S.-based OSI Group LLC, had supplied expired meat to the two chains.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.14Heard in the Hutong: Will China’s Rise Lead to Conflict?
Wall Street Journal
With Xi Jinping currently finishing up a trip to South America following a meeting of BRICS leaders in Brazil, China Real Time hit the streets of Beijing to find out what residents think about China’s place in the world.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.14Twitter Acts Quickly on Suspect Pro-China Accounts
New York Times
Just hours after The New York Times posted an article about bogus Twitter accounts dedicated to spreading pro-China propaganda—and a Tibetan advocacy group demanded that the company take action—Twitter appears to have hit the kill switch on a score...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.21.14More Internet Companies Should Go Abroad
Xinhua
More Chinese Internet companies should compete internationally, as they now have the ability and can make the world’s cyber environment more balanced and just.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.17.14Undermining China, One Knockout at a Time
New York Times
While blustering essays stoking Chinese nationalism are nothing new, Zhou Xiaoping’s piece on the “real-life war” being waged on the Internet seems to have enjoyed unusually broad circulation.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.17.14Inside a Beijing Interrogation Room
New York Times
In the course of my seven-hour interrogation the officers were never ferocious. In fact, they were polite. In this respect, the Chinese government has evolved to appear friendly, but it is still a dictatorial regime that will never...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.17.14The 2008 Milk Scandal Revisited
Council on Foreign Relations
Since the regulation of food safety incorporates several mutually reinforcing activities and involves various stakeholders, it is highly unlikely that pure top-down, state-centric regulatory and legal frameworks will be sufficient to defuse China’s...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.16.14China’s Censors Take Aim at Popular Internet TV Operators That Offer Foreign Shows
South China Morning Post
Seven companies told ‘unauthorized’ content will be taken down in seven days and they could see license revoked if breach is found.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.16.14Note to Cadres: Hands Off the Black Audi and Chauffeur
New York Times
Can you take away that ultimate perk of the respectable cadre—the black car with intimidatingly tinted windows, an equally intimidating medley of official insignia, passes and a faithful driver? We’re about to find out.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.16.14Chinese Media Blast Fox News Host Bob Beckel Over ‘Chinamen’ Rant
Hollywood Reporter
“The Five” co-host’s discriminatory remarks have caused a storm of controversy and anger in China, echoing calls in the U.S. for him to be fired.
Books
07.15.14
The Forbidden Game
In China, just because something is banned, doesn't mean it can't boom. Statistically, zero percent of the Chinese population plays golf, still known as the "rich man’s game" and considered taboo. Yet China is in the midst of a golf boom—hundreds of new courses have opened in the past decade, despite it being illegal for anyone to build them. Award-winning journalist Dan Washburn charts a vivid path through this contradictory country by following the lives of three men intimately involved in China's bizarre golf scene. We meet Zhou, a peasant turned golf pro who discovered the game when he won a job as a security guard at one of the new, exclusive clubs and who sees himself entering the emerging Chinese middle class as a result; Wang, a lychee farmer whose life is turned upside down when a massive, top-secret golf resort moves in next door to his tiny village; and Martin, a Western executive maneuvering through China’s byzantine and highly political business environment, ever watchful for Beijing's "golf police." The Forbidden Game is a rich and arresting portrait of the world’s newest superpower and three different paths to the new Chinese Dream. —Oneworld Publications {chop}
Caixin Media
07.15.14
Silencing a Health Reformer’s Voice
Dr. Liao Xinbo is struggling to square his enormous popularity and thirst for healthcare reform with a recent demotion that, in his words, marked the culmination of his frustrated work life.Liao served as Deputy Director of the Guangdong Province...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.10.14China Touts $14.4 Billion in Foreign Aid, Half of Which Went to Africa
Wall Street Journal
Instead of focusing on support for pricey, high-profile infrastructure that is often a lightning rod for foreign critics who say it’s less necessary than basic on-the-ground needs, the report highlighted China’s spending on comparatively smaller-...
The NYRB China Archive
07.10.14
Tibet Resists
from New York Review of Books
Tsering Woeser was born in Lhasa in 1966, the daughter of a senior officer in the Chinese army. She became a passionate supporter of the Dalai Lama. When she was very young the family moved to Tibetan towns inside China proper. In school, only...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.09.14As China Gets Fatter, World Bank Calls for Health Care Reform
Wall Street Journal
As China has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and grown increasingly wealthy, its people are suffering from many lifestyle diseases endemic to developed countries.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.08.14Millions Love ‘Beautiful Game,’ So Why Does China Struggle With Football?
CNN
With a population of 1.3 billion, you'd think that there would be 11 people in China who are good enough to put up a fight on the football pitch. But apparently not. Since 2002, the last—and only—time it made it to the World Cup finals, Team...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.08.14The Untold Story of China’s Forgotten Underground Nuclear Reactor
Foreign Policy
How social media and a little sleuthing turned up a Mao-era nuclear program.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.08.14Chinese Social Network For Moms Gets $20 Million
Tech in Asia
A Chinese social network for mothers has secured US$20 million in series B funding to help it grow. LMBang already has 20 million registered users, of whom 2.6 million are daily active users.
Caixin Media
07.08.14
Hard Choices for Family Planners and Parents
The technocrats in charge of China's one-child policy have the power to force sterilizations, abortions, and intra-uterine device (IUD) implants, as well as punish uncooperative parents by denying them jobs, denying their children schooling,...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.08.14Coca-Cola Offers Expats China Pollution Hazard Pay
Australian Financial Review
American beverage giant Coca-Cola is offering a hefty “environmental hardship allowance” to its China-based expatriate employees, as foreign companies struggle to attract and retain staff with many people scared off by chronic pollution.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.07.14China Denies Entry to an American Scholar Who Spoke Up for a Uighur Colleague
New York Times
When Elliot Sperling landed in Beijing, he found himself dragged by border officers back to the same jet that he had flown in on, despite the fact he had arrived with a valid one-year tourist visa.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.07.14China Box Office: ‘Transformers’ Now No. 1 Film of All Time
Hollywood Reporter
After only 10 days in release, Paramount’s Transformers: Age of Extinction has become the top-grossing movie of all time in China with $222.7 million in ticket sales, eclipsing the $221.9 million grossed by James Cameron’s Avatar. The 3D tentpole...
Sinica Podcast
07.05.14
Sin and Vice
from Sinica Podcast
This week on Sinica, Jeremy Goldkorn and David Moser turn their attention to vice, in conversation with Robert Foyle Hunwick, a media consultant and editor for Beijing Cream. We talk about everything naughty that happens here, with special attention...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.04.14An Online Shift in China Muffles an Open Forum
New York Times
In recent months, Chinese microblogging service Weibo has been eclipsed by the Facebook-like WeChat, which allows instant messaging within self-selected circles of followers.
Environment
07.03.14The Victims of China’s Soil Pollution Crisis
from chinadialogue
This is the first of a special three-part series of investigations jointly run by chinadialogue and Yale Environment 360, with support from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. You can also read parts two and three.When Zhang Junwei’s uncle died...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.02.14China Bans Xinjiang Officials From Observing Ramadan Fast
BBC
Activists have accused Beijing of exaggerating the threat from Uighur separatists to justify a crackdown on the Uighurs’ religious and cultural freedoms.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.02.14‘There Are No Rules in China’
Foreign Policy
When dissident author Murong Xuecun returns home, he says he will tell Beijing authorities they can come and get him.
Media
07.02.14
The Mogul Takes Manhattan
Lunch at Central Park's Loeb Boathouse is an elegant affair, popular among well-heeled tourists and alumni networking associations for its lakeside view and excellent service. But on Wednesday, June 25, the restaurant hosted hundreds of...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.01.14China’s Complicated Relationship with Golf
Golf
Dan Washburn, managing editor of the Asia Society and author of the new book “The Forbidden Game,” tells Jessica Marksbury that golf in China is both banned and booming.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.01.14Pro-Democracy Activism Not in Hong Kong’s Interest, China Warns
CNN
As potentially hundreds of thousands of Hong Kong citizens prepare to take to the streets in a now-annual display of public disapproval of Beijing’s interference in the city’s affairs, voices in China’s state-run press are warning that the protests...
ChinaFile Recommends
06.30.14China ‘Baby Hatch’ Inundated With Abandoned, Disabled Children
CNN
In just 11 days, 106 children, all with disabilities or medical conditions, were dropped off at the Jinan Orphanage, according to local state media. That is more than the 85 orphans the city accepted the entire previous year.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.30.14China Tries To Establish Foothold In Zambia, Tanzania
NPR
Howard French, author of China's Second Continent, talks to Steve Inskeep about why some African countries are of particular interest to Chinese leaders.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.30.14China Charges Four in Train Station Massacre
USA Today
Chinese authorities Monday charged four people with terrorism and murder in the March 1 knife massacre in the southwest city of Kunming, state media announced.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.30.14‘Transformers’ Breaks Box-Office Records in China
Los Angeles Times
“Transformers: Age of Extinction” broke multiple box-office records in mainland China in its first weekend of release and appears to be en route to displacing “Avatar” as the top-grossing film ever on the mainland.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.30.14They’re Dying at Their Desks in China as Epidemic of Stress Proves Fatal
Bloomberg
China is facing an epidemic of overwork, to hear the state-controlled press and Chinese social media tell it.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.27.14The (Continuing) Story of Ai—From Tragedy to Farce
Randian
In recent weeks Ai Weiwei has become embroiled, yet again, in apparent controversy.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.25.14Hundreds of NYC’s Homeless Were Duped by a Chinese Millionaire Today
Vice News
A Chinese millionaire treated 250 homeless New Yorkers to a feast and karaoke rendition of “We Are the World” in Central Park today, but pretty much everyone left the event totally totally disappointed.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.25.14Congress Votes to Rename Road by Chinese Embassy After Jailed Dissident
Time
Beijing is not amused by the “provocative action,” as Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo “has been convicted in accordance with the law.”
ChinaFile Recommends
06.24.14Web Preaches Jihad to China's Muslim Uighurs
Wall Street Journal
China says the Internet and social media incite terrorism among Uighur minority.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.23.14Yang Lan, the ‘Oprah of China,’ Expands Her Reach
Time
Yang Lan is partnering with MAKERS to bring the women's-stories platform to China.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.22.14Young Men Who Are Anything Short Of Wealthy In Urban China Face Brutal Girlfriend Reality
Business Insider
China has at least more than 30 million more men than women. As a result, finding a girlfriend there is extremely difficult.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.21.1413 ‘Thugs’ Die in Attack on China Police Station
USA Today
Chinese police shot dead 13 people who attacked a police station in the restive northwest region of Xinjiang Saturday morning, according to a report on the local government website and the state-run Xinhua news agency.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.20.14A Man Takes His Cabbage for a Walk
New York Times
The Chinese performance artist Han Bing recently dragged a cabbage through city centers as a social commentary on people’s relationships with objects in their lives.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.19.14Do Chinese Classrooms Need to Talk About Sex?
CNN
Sex education is taught inadequately in school and avoided by parents, resulting in generations of Chinese children growing up wondering if babies come out of armpits, or from the garbage dump, as others have also cited.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.18.14Chinese Directors on Winning Global Box Office: ‘Attacking Hollywood Is the Best Way’
Hollywood Reporter
At the Shanghai Film Festival's most popular forum, leading local film figures debate whether Hollywood is friend or foe.
Caixin Media
06.18.14
China’s Retiring Migrant Workers Have No Place to Call Home
A generation of Chinese people from rural areas who moved to the big cities to find work is reaching retirement age, but many are finding they have been left outside the country's urban pension system despite extensive reforms in recent years...
Books
06.18.14
The People’s Republic of Amnesia
On June 4, 1989, People's Liberation Army soldiers opened fire on unarmed civilians in Beijing, killing untold hundreds of people. A quarter-century later, this defining event remains buried in China's modern history, successfully expunged from collective memory. In The People's Republic of Amnesia, NPR correspondent Louisa Lim charts how the events of June 4th changed China, and how China changed the events of June 4th by rewriting its own history.{node, 5555}Lim reveals new details about those fateful days, including how one of the country's most senior politicians lost a family member to an army bullet, as well as the inside story of the young soldiers sent to clear Tiananmen Square. She also introduces us to individuals whose lives were transformed by the events of Tiananmen Square, such as a founder of the Tiananmen Mothers, whose son was shot by martial law troops; and one of the most important government officials in the country, who post-Tiananmen became one of its most prominent dissidents. And she examines how June 4th shaped China's national identity, fostering a generation of young nationalists, who know little and care less about 1989. For the first time, Lim uncovers the details of a brutal crackdown in a second Chinese city that until now has been a near-perfect case study in the state's ability to rewrite history, excising the most painful episodes. By tracking down eyewitnesses, discovering U.S. diplomatic cables, and combing through official Chinese records, Lim offers the first account of a story that has remained untold for a quarter of a century. The People's Republic of Amnesia is an original, powerfully gripping, and ultimately unforgettable book about a national tragedy and an unhealed wound. —Oxford University Press {chop}
ChinaFile Recommends
06.17.14China’s Answer To Its Poverty Of Space: Moving Mountains
Forbes
Chongqing, Shiyan, Yichang, Lanzhou and Yan’an. All belong to the “Yellow” China, a parched region tormented by a complicated geography that severely limits almost all human activities, such as farming, communications, construction or industry.
Sinica Podcast
06.16.14
The Resurgence of Gender Inequality in China
from Sinica Podcast
This week on Sinica, Kaiser and Jeremy are joined by David Moser and Leta Hong Fincher, newly-minted Ph.D. and author of Leftover Women, a book which gazes into the state of women’s rights in China, and documents the way state-sanctioned propaganda...
