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Does China’s Constitution Guarantee Freedom of Religion?
<p>For the outside observer seeking to make sense of China’s religious policy, the Chinese Constitution presents quite a conundrum.</p>
Lead Article
Perceptions and Priorities of Christian Leaders in China
<p>A recent survey of Christian leaders in China and representatives of churches and organizations outside China that work with these leaders provides insight into the health of China’s churches and their ministry priorities. It also looks at their involvement in society and mission outreach. In addition, participants were surveyed regarding restrictions they had experienced due […]
Milestones in the Evolution of China’s Overseas NGO Law
[…] behind China’s new overseas NGO law, which put the law into the larger political context of China. For a closer look at how the law was actually formulated, I recommend Shawn Shieh’s excellent piece, “The Origins of China’s New Law on Foreign NGOs,” which traces the evolution of NGO policy from the late 1980s up to the present.</p>
When All Roads Lead to Beijing
<p>China’s foreign policy under Xi Jinping has witnessed a significant shift. Formerly focused on China’s relationship with the world’s major powers, China’s leaders are now redirecting their attention to relations with the nations around China, as well as to those nations beyond with which China seeks to develop closer economic ties.</p>
Chinese Education: From Hallowed to Hollow
[…] in row, the number of college hopefuls taking the national university entrance exam, or gaokao, has dropped. Analysts trace the decline to a corresponding drop in the number of children born at the beginning of the last decade due to China's one-child policy. However, the decrease also suggests two realities facing young people in China today.</p>
China does a lot of things.
In this vein we often hear that "China" persecutes Christians. The assumption behind this statement is that the Chinese government has a specific policy of cracking down on the church, and that this policy is uniformly implemented across China. As Joann Pittman points out in the current issue of the ChinaSouce Quarterly, the idea […]
Anticipating Urban China
[…] the overall numbers grow, the age of the urban population has risen as one age group has declined—the urban children. As a result of the One Child Policy, sixty million of China’s three hundred million children age fourteen and under are “only” children. Since peasants continue to have two or more children, it is […]
Editorials
China by the Numbers
[…] had shot back up, contributing to a stabilizing of global population growth until the early 1970s. Then the global numbers began a slow decline as China’s one-child policy took hold with dramatic effect into the early 1980s. China Tips the Scales This simple graph in an airline magazine was yet another example of how […]
View From the Wall
China in 2020
Vol. 9, No. 3
[…] China’s economic vitality has its origins in the aspirations of the Chinese people to change their living conditions and in the fundamental change in Chinese government economic policy. When the government ceased controlling and planning for every unit of production, the potential that was unleashed is difficult to comprehendmore than a billion people, wanting […]
House Church and TSPM: Surprising Admissions in China’s Official Press
[…] who refused to cooperate at that time with the TSPM were imprisoned. The author also quotes one of China's well-known "public intellectuals," a scholar on Chinese religious policy, who asserts that today more than half of China's believers are likely in the unofficial church. In a section curiously subtitled "A forceless amnesty," the article […]