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Peoples of China

Understanding and Engaging with the Post-Eighties Generation

<p>In China, the “post-eighties” denotes those who are were generally born during the 1980s. They are the earliest generation of those who became known in the West as the “Little Emperors” of China. Typically, they were raised in a family environment where all adults focused their attention on their only heir. R and J […]

Blog Entries

China Ministry and Transformational Development (1)

The End of an Era?

Social service has been a key component of Christian mission ever since the Apostle Paul first collected funds to support the impoverished Christians in Jerusalem. While humanitarian aid waxed and waned in importance within mission circles during the intervening centuries, at the beginning of the twentieth century it came under great scrutiny particularly within […]

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The Many Faces of the Chinese Church

[…] is within this segment of the Chinese population, within these fifty-five people groups, where the story of China’s people groups becomes truly intriguing. In other words, the number fifty-five does not tell the whole story. According to Paul Hattaway in Operation China, a comprehensive profile of China’s various people groups, many of the fifty-five […]

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From Doing to Paving the Way

[…] smooth one. Yet for China’s Christians, the burgeoning local NGO sector provides a legal avenue for social engagement in a variety of areas. Having created viable social service models over the past decades, entrepreneurial foreign NGO leaders whose own positions in China may be in jeopardy have the responsibility to transfer this knowledge and […]

Editorials

Urban Migrants

Building the Infrastructure

[…] be unwilling to take themselves. Those who make it a bit higher up the social ladder find employment in the burgeoning service industry, waiting on tables, cooking, cleaning or working in the homes of China’s growing middle class. In the Pearl River and Yangtze delta regions tens of millions of young migrants labor on […]

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From Entrepreneur to Catalyst

[…] due to attrition, shifting organizational priorities, and a changing environment in China, this entrepreneurial generation is shrinking. The entrepreneurs who paved the way in many areas of service in China and who are now in leadership today are also significantly older than the emerging leaders whom they seek to serve. In a 2015 study […]

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Lockdown Is Over, but Life Is Still Not Normal

[…] first and the biggest addiction I heard mentioned repeatedly was the addiction to cell phones and the internet. Other addictions mentioned were sleeping pills and alcohol. Regarding phone addiction, one counselor used the phrase “bondage to their cell phone.” With no place to go, many people spent endless hours on their phones chatting with […]

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Educational Inequality and the Making of a New Urban Underclass

[…] be unwilling to take themselves. Those who make it a bit higher up the social ladder find employment in the burgeoning service industry, waiting on tables, cooking, cleaning, or working in the homes of China's growing middle class. In the Pearl River and Yangtze delta regions tens of millions of young migrants labor on […]

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Reading Tea Leaves from the 2021 National Religious Work Conference

[…] few COVID cases appear. That makes President Xi’s mention of increased restriction on internet religious activities even more consequential. Inside China, congregations have moved to online worship services but any religious activity online that is not officially licensed now appears to be banned; new regulations take effect on March 1, 2022 (in Chinese), that […]

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The Challenge of China’s Shifting Labor Market

[…] the demand for robotic technology. Meanwhile the growing ranks of China’s urban consumers are performing more transactions online that previously required interacting in person with sales or service personnel. Whether shopping for insurance or buying a television, there is less and less of a need to go physically to an office or retail outlet. […]