Results for: Delta%20Airlines%20%20%20800-299-7264%20Reservation%20Policy

Showing results for delta airlines 20 20 2800 299 726 reservation policy delta airlines 20 20 202009 28 20 20 2800 299 726 202009-2-28 airlines 20 20 2800 299 726 airlines 20 20 202009 28 20 20 2800 299 726 20 20 2800 299 726 20 20 202009 28 20 20 2800 299 726

Book Reviews

Closing a Perception/Reality Gap

A Book Review

<p><em>Religious Freedom in China: Policy, Administration, and Regulation; A Research Handbook</em> by Kim-kwong Chan and Eric R. Carlson<br /> <em>Reviewed by Brent Fulton</em></p> <p>This volume provides reliable information about religious policy and its implementation in China. </p>

Blog Entries

China’s New Two-Child Policy

<p>Rumors were swirling all last week that the Chinese government would announce a major relaxation of the 35-year-old “one-child policy.”  Sure enough, on Thursday, October 29, it happened.</p>

The Lantern

Examining China’s Religious Policy

<p>One of the questions frequently asked about China concerns the degree to which Christians in China face persecution, the default assumption being that China has a specific policy of repressing Christianity.</p>

The Lantern

New Resource: ChinaSource Law and Policy Monitor

<p>In response to the uncertainties resulting from China's new Overseas NGO Law, we've created the<em> ChinaSource Law and Policy Monitor</em>.  Here we introduce this new service and explain how organizations can sample the <em>Monitor</em> while helping ChinaSource in its efforts to understand how the law is impacting those who serve.</p>

Blog Entries

Chinas Leadership Shuffle and the Church

[…] on the red carpet in Beijing's Great Hall of the People. Many have asked what implications the Congress has for Christians in China. While it is known that religious policy was on the agenda this year, only time will tell how the closed-door discussions on this topic will play out in terms of actual policy.</p>

Supporting Article

How Zhongguohua Was Adopted as a Path in China’s Current Religious Policy

[…] now widely used in academic discourse as a term that addresses that addresses the integration into “Chinese culture, the Chinese nation, and in particular, contemporary Chinese society.” 20 The difference between then and now lies not in the question of adaptation but in the circumstances to which Christianity should adapt. Today, this is the […]

Blog Entries

Put Down the Tea Leaves (and Look Out the Window)

[…] to separate out significant long-term trends from those events that, while appearing important in the moment, may prove to be mere distractions. This is particularly true for those working with the church in China, who often attempt to "read the tea leaves," through the lens of religious policy and its immediate affect upon China's Christians.</p>

Blog Entries

Why China Needs Two

<p>The big news out of China last week was, of course, the Party’s decision to alter its longstanding family planning policy.</p>

Blog Entries

Rhetoric and Reality

Leaders in the policy arena face the difficult task of taking constructive action while at the same time being intentional participants in a larger conversation that could directly impact their options. In a similar way, Christians engaged in China are called to expand the larger conversation beyond the currently acknowledged reality, exposing their fellow […]

Chinese Christian Voices

Chinese Christians Pray following the China Eastern Airlines Crash

On Tuesday, March 22, China Eastern Flight MU5735 crashed about an hour into the flight. There were no survivors. China’s commercial airlines have not had a major disaster in recent years and so this has drawn the attention of people both inside and outside of China. Christians in China have responded to the tragedy […]