Keyword: chinese communist party
Ed Wong discussed the country's "adaptive authoritarianism" in an event at Asia Society.
Chinese authorities have been increasingly censoring foreign media, but studies suggest they may be better off letting it in.
Studying in America seems to be transforming Chinese students' political, religious, and social outlooks — but not in a uniform direction.
"The essential point is that when China is the world’s largest economy, there’s a psychological shift," notes Asia Society Senior Fellow Jamie Metzl at a recent Vail Symposium talk.
A decision, cloaked in secrecy, that would affect more than a billion people. Speculation on whether the chosen one would be a "conservative" or a "reformer." Which leadership change are we talking about?
Former "Southern Weekend" editor Chang Ping tells ChinaFile that conflicts between journalists and censors at the newspaper go way back.
Jeffrey Wasserstrom and Rachel Beitarie reply to Nicholas Kristof's New York Time's piece predicting that Xi Jinping will spearhead an economic reform resurgence.
We revisit the history of writer, Pearl Buck, that looks at her catapulting into international celebrity and wealth overnight from obscurity and semi-poverty.
The downfall of Bo Xilai reveals that there continues to be something surreal about trying to keep up with Chinese high politics, writes Asia Society Associate Fellow Jeffrey Wasserstrom.