Anti-Child Prostitution Movement
The phenomenon of child prostitution is closely related to human trafficking, the collapse of social values, poverty in Indigenous families, and the violence and inhumanity of the sex industry.
Prof. Dr. Chin Ken Pa, Department of Philosophy, Fu Jen Catholic University, Taiwan. Professor Chin’s areas of research include Critical Theory, Post-modernism, Western theology in the 20th century, and Sino-theology. His teaching courses include the history of Western philosophy, philosophy of religion, and the political theology of Carl Schmitt. He is the chief editor of Sino-Christian Classic Library and the complete works of Xie Fuya (N. Z. Zia, 謝扶雅). He was formerly a Distinguished Professor at Chung Yuan Christian University and has been a visiting fellow at Harvard University and a guest professor at Renmin University of China and the Institute of Sino-Christian Studies in Hong Kong.
The phenomenon of child prostitution is closely related to human trafficking, the collapse of social values, poverty in Indigenous families, and the violence and inhumanity of the sex industry.
In recent years, the approach to religious affairs has shifted toward the “Sinicization of Christianity.” This strategy is rooted in two key objectives: “countering infiltration” and “going global.”