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Blog Entries

“We Don’t Believe in Anything”

<p>If you want to find out what is really going on—I mean really going on—in China, ask a taxi driver. Since they spend all day conversing with people from all walks of life, getting various takes and perspectives on the issues of the day, few people have a better feel for the mood.</p>

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | February 18, 2016

<p></p> <p>Leave China, Study in America, Find Jesus (February 11, 2016, Foreign Policy)<br /> One day in early September, as frigid weather moved into Madison, a group of students approached Cai in her dormitory hallway to ask her opinion about God. She realized that she had never thought about it before. Out of simple […]

Blog Entries

Millennial Migrants

<p>While living in Beijing, I came to know well a migrant family. They had arrived in Beijing in the mid-1990s and had managed to find good jobs and earn enough money to buy an apartment and start a family. Even though they did not have a Beijing <em>hukou</em>, they managed to get their children into […]

Blog Entries

Yinchuan!

You can find Hui people in many provinces in China but most live in the Ningxia Hui Autonomous region in northwestern China. Yinchuan is the capital city of Ningxia.

Blog Entries

The Unseen Side of China’s Internet Explosion

[…] one's family was particularly privileged. Today, although wired telephones in every home still may not be the norm, personal mobile phones are considered a necessity. Even for migrant workers with no permanent home and very few personal possessions, the mobile phone is a lifeline to family back home and to job opportunities in the city.</p>

Blog Entries

ZGBriefs The Weeks Top Picks, February 20 Issue

<p>There were a number of articles in this week's ZGBriefs that caught my attention. The first two are about romance and weddings in China. The third one is about government efforts to save abandoned babies by providing "baby hatches" in various cities. The fourth is for fun video highlights of a motorcycle ride around China.</p>

Blog Entries

The Greying of China and the Church’s Response

<p>As China’s elderly population mushrooms and its working-age population shrinks, Christian families find themselves caught in the middle of this demographic divide. Cultural expectations and legal requirements put the onus on them to care for older family members, but neither the government nor the society at large are adequately prepared to support this effort.</p>

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | June 21, 2018

<p><strong>The Hidden History of Shanghai’s Jewish Quarter</strong>  (June 13, 2018, <em>Atlas Obscura</em>)<br /> When the world refused to let in Jews fleeing Nazi Germany, Shanghai was the only place on earth willing to accept them with or without papers. </p>

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 25, 2018

<p>Buddha-mania: Understanding China’s Buddha Building Boom  (October 23, 2018, <em>Sixth Tone</em>)<br /> Is there such a thing as too many Buddhas? China may be about to find out.</p>

Blog Entries

An Interview with Mike Frith, Founder and Director of OSCAR

ChinaSource is excited to partner with OSCAR, which stands for One Stop Center for Advice and Resources. The UK-based website offers both in-person and online courses, including the British Culture Orientation course. Find out about this course and more aspects of OSCAR’s work in this “3 Questions” video interview with Mike Frith.