This paper discusses Xi Jinping’s policy of religious sinicisation (zhongguohua 中国化) and the subsequent revision of the Regulations on Religious Affairs. I argue that Xi’s fear of foreign influence has driven the direction of recent changes in religious policy in favour of indigenous or indigenised religions. I show that the effort to sinicise religions and the consequent strengthening of the existing regulatory framework risks exacerbating the challenges that the Xi regime seeks to confront in the first place
China is rising aiming at the status of a great power. Yet internally the Chinese society is troubli...
The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) abolished its total ban on religious activities in 1982. Ho...
On the surface, religious policy in China may appear contradictory. On the one hand, the state is of...
With the incorporation of the State Administration for Religious Affairs (SARA) into the Chinese Com...
From 2015 onwards, “sinicizing religions„ has become the mantra of China’s religio...
This paper examines both the revival of religious organisations and practices in China and what coul...
Resurgence in religious activity has accompanied China\u27s astounding progress in economic developm...
The People’s Republic of China has signed to accept the Charter of the United Nations and the Univer...
This article focuses on three conceptual lenses through which a better understanding of the politics...
The People\u27s Republic of China has a complicated relationship with religion, which became even te...
In recent years, religious policy in China has faced an increasingly dynamic panorama of religious a...
Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post provocatively dedicated the cover story of one of its recent we...
Since Xi Jinping took office as General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, he has been tighte...
Disagreement over the nature of religion in China - a civilization that has long confounded the voca...
This article is a study of the continuities and changes in the state-led institutionalisation of rel...
China is rising aiming at the status of a great power. Yet internally the Chinese society is troubli...
The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) abolished its total ban on religious activities in 1982. Ho...
On the surface, religious policy in China may appear contradictory. On the one hand, the state is of...
With the incorporation of the State Administration for Religious Affairs (SARA) into the Chinese Com...
From 2015 onwards, “sinicizing religions„ has become the mantra of China’s religio...
This paper examines both the revival of religious organisations and practices in China and what coul...
Resurgence in religious activity has accompanied China\u27s astounding progress in economic developm...
The People’s Republic of China has signed to accept the Charter of the United Nations and the Univer...
This article focuses on three conceptual lenses through which a better understanding of the politics...
The People\u27s Republic of China has a complicated relationship with religion, which became even te...
In recent years, religious policy in China has faced an increasingly dynamic panorama of religious a...
Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post provocatively dedicated the cover story of one of its recent we...
Since Xi Jinping took office as General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, he has been tighte...
Disagreement over the nature of religion in China - a civilization that has long confounded the voca...
This article is a study of the continuities and changes in the state-led institutionalisation of rel...
China is rising aiming at the status of a great power. Yet internally the Chinese society is troubli...
The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) abolished its total ban on religious activities in 1982. Ho...
On the surface, religious policy in China may appear contradictory. On the one hand, the state is of...