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Blog Entries

The Overseas NGO Law: A Second Look

[…] under the Overseas NGO (ONGO) Law is getting underway, albeit slowly. The Ministry of Public Security, charged with overseeing foreign organizations in China, is adapting to its new role. Organizations designated as Professional Supervisory Units (PSUs) are likewise forging partnerships with overseas groups. In some localities, provincial officials are taking the initiative to meet […]

Blog Entries

China’s Urbanization: Three Things You Should Know

[…] a rapidly growing middle class, eager to get their hands on the latest consumer or even luxury goods, other urban cities are still serving as magnets for new migrants. The contrast between these, and the opportunities each affords, can be huge. Environmental Impact? The jury is still out. Seto says, "It's not that China […]

Editorials

Connecting Leaders

Luther points out in his article, “A New Era for House Church Leaders,” that China’s unregistered church is “breaking through the surface of the water” and becoming more visible. This new visibility has implications both for how the church relates to the larger society and for how church leaders can now relate to one […]

Blog Entries

You Can’t Do That in China!

[…] church narratives do a disservice to our brothers and sisters in China by discounting their ingenuity, their perseverance, and their faith. Our narratives can cause us to lose sight of a greater work of God that may be unfolding in ways we are yet unable to comprehend. And our narratives can keep those in […]

Editorials

Twenty-five and Counting

[…] China to better understand the trends shaping that country. Julia Grosser, then serving in the College’s Institute for Chinese Studies, took on the challenge of managing the new publication and has served faithfully in that role ever since. Dona Diehl of the Evangelical Missions and Information Service (EMIS) designed the first issue and continues […]

Editorials

Thinking with Their Hearts

Postmodernism in China

[…] and other postmodern luminaries, this nevertheless did not deter them from engaging in animated discussions about power relationships or from deconstructing literary classics in order to discover new meanings, found not in the context of the literature itself but in the interaction between it and its modern critics. “Why do we spend all our […]

Editorials

Urban Migrants

Building the Infrastructure

[…] “Bird’s Nest” stadium that became the much heralded centerpiece of the 2008 Beijing Games was erected at unprecedented speed, along with dozens of other Olympic venues, several new subway lines and major beautification projects across the city. None of this would be possible were it not for hundreds of millions of migrant workers streaming […]

Editorials

A Church on the Move

[…] agricultural sector, the industrialization of the countryside, and more evangelists moving to the cities, this model has become less and less viable. From Farmhouse to Factory Floor New models are emerging that provide Christians who move to the cities with a means of support, a legitimate status within the city and a platform for […]

Editorials

Education: For Whom? And Why?

[…] the 1980s signaled a radical shift, as “key point” schools were reopened and thousands of the finest students sent abroad for study. With the dawn of the new millennium comes a third alternative—market-driven education. The marketization of education conveniently answers both the government’s desire to cease being the sole underwriter of education in China […]

Blog Entries

From Here to There

The Straight-Line Fallacy

[…] ideals. The result, according to this narrative, would be a China that is not only friendly to the West, but also more similar politically and culturally. Former Los Angeles Times Beijing Bureau Chief James Mann dissected this narrative in his 2007 book, The China Fantasy (New York: Viking). As his book title suggests, Mann […]