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ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 20, 2016

[…] 2016, Sixth Tone) In the early ’90s, nearly 100,000 people lived in a city that couldn’t be found on any map. It had no name, just a code: 404. 404 City is located on the sandy plains of Gansu province in China’s northwest, some 100 kilometers to the west of Jiayuguan City. Its name […]

Chinese Christian Voices

A New Tool for Suppressing Churches?

[…] July 5, Zion Church Yizhuang campus suddenly received a text message from the landlord requesting the termination of the contract and refused to refund the initial two-month deposit and the quarterly rent payment which had just been paid. When members of the church rushed to the Yizhuang campus, they found that the door was […]

Blog Entries

ZGBriefs The Weeks Top Picks, January 9 Issue

[…] low profile, Chinese Christians are noticeable for their behavior , often through what they no longer take part in as a result of their faith and resulting code of ethics: the refusal to join the compulsory singing sessions of party songs, which are still part of political education on campus; the refusal to take […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | January 21, 2016

[…] Drug Firms, Hospital (January 18, 2016, China Real Time) At the center of the debate is a new push to require drug makers to pay a “ deposit” of as much as tens of thousands of dollars per product in order to have their drugs sold in Chinese hospitals, which are under increasing financial […]

Blog Entries

China and the Vatican

[…] will be divided between Islam and Christianity with significant pockets of indigenous religious practice. In China, however, things seem more up for grabs. Confucianism is an ethical code more than a religion, and seventy years of official atheism have more or less fallen by the wayside in favor of palpable spiritual hunger. Yet while […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | November 7, 2019

[…] city’  (November 1, 2910, South China Morning Post) The city, which is known for its technology industry, was told by Beijing in August  to find “the best modern governance practices that promote high quality and sustainable development so it can be held up as an example of civilised society of law and order where people enjoy a high […]

The Lantern

The Sanjiang Church Incident: More than Meets the Eye

[…] was some dispute with local officials about the size of the cross on top of the building. It's not clear whether this had to do with building code regulations or a desire on the part of officials to limit the visible expression of the church in the community Having received permission to build a […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | March 23, 2017

[…] He has pursued an expansionist foreign policy, occupying and militarizing vast reaches of the South China Sea, while at home he has cracked down on corruption and promoted traditional values. Has Xi Jinping Gotten His Crown? (March 19, 2017, China Media Project) The recent pagentry surrounding the fifth and final session of China’s 12th […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | May 16, 2019

[…] In speeches and a flurry of new cultural exchange programs in the last year, Xi has increasingly called on Asian countries to stand together with self-confidence and promote their culture as the world becomes “multipolar.” Video: ChinaFile Presents: Hong Kong’s Relationship with Beijing, An Update  (May 15, 2019, ChinaFile) ChinaFilehosted a conversation at the Asia Society […]

Blog Entries

Training Cross-Cultural Workers to Cross Honor-Shame Cultures

[…] 2000); Jackson Wu, <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://amzn.to/2T5AJXj" target="_blank"><em>Reading Romans with Eastern Eyes</em></a> (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2019); Among historical and sociological treatments, cf. Anthony Appiah, <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://amzn.to/2ILm5CC" target="_blank"><em>The Honor Code: How Moral Revolutions Happen </em></a>(New York: Norton, 2010); Graham Scambler, <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://amzn.to/3kirBKM" target="_blank"><em>A Sociology of Shame and Blame: Insiders Versus Outsiders</em> </a>(New York: Palgrave Pivot, 2019)