The Chinese just can’t kick the repression habit. Today they have arrested (and then released) ITV journalist John Ray who was covering a Free Tibet demo. It backfires for the Beijing regime because now that will be all over ITV’s bulletins and is available to the world (well apart from China I guess) on YouTube
This study provides a survey of how the Chinese Communist Party\u27s information control affects the...
The Olympics are over, but China needs to be kept under pressure, argues ANN KENT A BURNING questio...
This chapter explores the contending interpretations of riots that took place in Lhasa, Tibet in the...
From January 2007, China has unveiled a new set of regulations on reporting activities during Beijin...
China is making headlines around the world in many ways. The global media is fascinated by recent ta...
This 40-page report documents how Chinese authorities have repeatedly obstructed the work of foreign...
China\u27s economy has modernised over the past 30 years, and its communications environment has bec...
China’s leaders are learning PR lessons quickly over their Olympic torch disaster, but not quickly e...
China has responded to universal coverage of unrest in Tibet with an attempt to restrict access to t...
Taelspin will glean the best of the China blogosphere for your reading enjoyment. Suggestions and co...
Despite persistent pressure from state censors and other tools of political control, investigative j...
According to Jeffrey Wasserstrom’s article, if the Chinese think they can censor the Olympics, and t...
1. Hu Jintao has made a trip to Xinjiang, his first since riots there in July. Xinjiang was in the n...
While the English language press has been reporting that over 100,000 police and 30,000 soldiers hav...
It has been four years since our last WPCC Chinese media issue was published. In that time, the Peop...
This study provides a survey of how the Chinese Communist Party\u27s information control affects the...
The Olympics are over, but China needs to be kept under pressure, argues ANN KENT A BURNING questio...
This chapter explores the contending interpretations of riots that took place in Lhasa, Tibet in the...
From January 2007, China has unveiled a new set of regulations on reporting activities during Beijin...
China is making headlines around the world in many ways. The global media is fascinated by recent ta...
This 40-page report documents how Chinese authorities have repeatedly obstructed the work of foreign...
China\u27s economy has modernised over the past 30 years, and its communications environment has bec...
China’s leaders are learning PR lessons quickly over their Olympic torch disaster, but not quickly e...
China has responded to universal coverage of unrest in Tibet with an attempt to restrict access to t...
Taelspin will glean the best of the China blogosphere for your reading enjoyment. Suggestions and co...
Despite persistent pressure from state censors and other tools of political control, investigative j...
According to Jeffrey Wasserstrom’s article, if the Chinese think they can censor the Olympics, and t...
1. Hu Jintao has made a trip to Xinjiang, his first since riots there in July. Xinjiang was in the n...
While the English language press has been reporting that over 100,000 police and 30,000 soldiers hav...
It has been four years since our last WPCC Chinese media issue was published. In that time, the Peop...
This study provides a survey of how the Chinese Communist Party\u27s information control affects the...
The Olympics are over, but China needs to be kept under pressure, argues ANN KENT A BURNING questio...
This chapter explores the contending interpretations of riots that took place in Lhasa, Tibet in the...