On the surface, religious policy in China may appear contradictory. On the one hand, the state is officially atheist. It has mounted a highly publicized campaign to suppress Falun Gong, and maintains restrictions on Islam, Tibetan Buddhism and Christianity that reveal a profound fear of independent religious organisation. On the other, China insists that it respects religious freedom. The Chinese government proudly supports the staging of certain religious festivals, finances reconstruction of historic temples, and sponsors Chinese Muslims to visit Mecca. In fact, both tendencies are part of a consistent pattern of religious policy that seeks to establish firm political control over religious organisations, while visibly integrating religio...
This Master’s thesis is the first in a series of papers concerning religious freedom in Chinese cult...
The People's Republic of China has long demonstrated significant variation in its treatment of the d...
Taking stock of the rapid progress in neurotheology, this paper offers a new explanation for the puz...
Resurgence in religious activity has accompanied China\u27s astounding progress in economic developm...
The aim of this article is to present the controversial features of the secularization thesis about ...
The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) abolished its total ban on religious activities in 1982. Ho...
Western media reports on the relationship between state and religion in the People’s Republic ...
Since the mid-1950s, the Chinese state has exerted tight ideological and administrative control over...
The Chinese religious revival initiated by the reforms of the post-Mao era is a phenomenon evident a...
In the three decades since the end of the Maoist era, all forms of religion in China have been under...
Different from many societies that religion is embedded in the cultural tradition and is supported o...
The People\u27s Republic of China has a complicated relationship with religion, which became even te...
This essays looks at the diversity of approaches used by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in its po...
In 1979, the Chinese Communist Party restored its policy of freedom of religion. The intention of th...
This paper is part of broader research on social welfare, understood in its broadest sense as social...
This Master’s thesis is the first in a series of papers concerning religious freedom in Chinese cult...
The People's Republic of China has long demonstrated significant variation in its treatment of the d...
Taking stock of the rapid progress in neurotheology, this paper offers a new explanation for the puz...
Resurgence in religious activity has accompanied China\u27s astounding progress in economic developm...
The aim of this article is to present the controversial features of the secularization thesis about ...
The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) abolished its total ban on religious activities in 1982. Ho...
Western media reports on the relationship between state and religion in the People’s Republic ...
Since the mid-1950s, the Chinese state has exerted tight ideological and administrative control over...
The Chinese religious revival initiated by the reforms of the post-Mao era is a phenomenon evident a...
In the three decades since the end of the Maoist era, all forms of religion in China have been under...
Different from many societies that religion is embedded in the cultural tradition and is supported o...
The People\u27s Republic of China has a complicated relationship with religion, which became even te...
This essays looks at the diversity of approaches used by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in its po...
In 1979, the Chinese Communist Party restored its policy of freedom of religion. The intention of th...
This paper is part of broader research on social welfare, understood in its broadest sense as social...
This Master’s thesis is the first in a series of papers concerning religious freedom in Chinese cult...
The People's Republic of China has long demonstrated significant variation in its treatment of the d...
Taking stock of the rapid progress in neurotheology, this paper offers a new explanation for the puz...