The China Project Sources 2017

Ever wonder how we produce a daily newsletter with dozens of links every day? (A daily and free newsletter you should subscribe to, by the way.) We read. A lot. We have sources. We call them: The China Projectย Sources. And weโ€™d like to reveal them to you.

The approximately 150 links in this document constitute some (though not all) of the most regularly visited English-language websites that we use to collect noteworthy and newsworthy updates and insights on China. This list is not comprehensive โ€”ย for one thing, it doesnโ€™t include most of our Chinese-language sources โ€”ย but it is long, and yes, we do have favorites.

For all those in the list below, and so many others who do the difficult work of making sense of a complex country, we thank you. As always, if you have a tip, please email us at any time: editors@thechinaproject.com.

The China Project Seven

The China Projectย finds these seven sources indispensable. We visit them daily and so should you. They sift through the noise to present a clear, coherent, concise picture of a complex China.

  • The South China Morning Post, a leading Hong Kong outlet that has dramatically expanded its reach under the leadership of CEO Gary Liu (interviewed recentlyย on the Sinica Podcast). China section here.
  • TechNode, a Beijing-based website with a young staff that does an excellent job covering the fast-changing, unpredictable China tech scene. In English, in Chinese.
  • Caixin, Chinaโ€™s most authoritative source for business and financial news. In English, in Chinese.ย Disclosure: They partner with us to produce the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief.
  • Whatโ€™s on Weibo, a DIY blog run by the inexhaustible Manya Koetse, offering rich analysis of trending topics and controversies on Chinaโ€™s internet. Read it here.
  • ChinaFile, an excellent project from the Asia Society that publishes original articles, multimedia, and roundtable discussions with China-watchers, and archives all kinds of writing and documentation of the Chinese world. Read it here.
  • Sixth Tone, a Shanghai-based state-owned outlet that is allowed to write about a surprisingly broad range of social and cultural topics. Sixth Toneย humanizes China in a way few outlets can. In English here. Also see: Pengpai akaย The Paper, its Chinese-language sister site.
  • Shanghaiist, a blog on Chinese current events, internet gossip and memes, and local events for the expat crowd. Read it here.

Other Really Good Sources

China sitesย you should look at, listed alphabetically:

  • The Africa China Reporting Projectย — From Wits University in South Africa.
  • The Beijingerย — Local news and entertainment/travel information for the Beijing expat crowd.
  • The China Africa Projectย — A hub for China-Africa issues.
  • China Africa Research Initiativeย — A hub for research on China-Africa relations done at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C. See also itsย China in Africa: The Real Storyย blog.
  • China Channelย — From the Los Angeles Review of Books, a collection of essays, reviews, and other media on Chinese society, culture, history, and more.
  • The China Collectionย — A blog on โ€œChinese law, politics, economics, finance, and other stuffโ€ by five legal scholars.
  • China Daily Showย — Satire; Chinaโ€™s Onion, run by a British expat.
  • China Dialogueย — Bilingual essays on how China is handling environmental issues at home and around the world.
  • China Digital Times — Politics, society, law, culture, run out of UC Berkeley and edited by Sophie Beach; the best way to stay informed on censorship issues in China.
  • China Film Insiderย — Daily news and insight on the film industry.
  • China Heritageย — โ€œAn independent web-based publishing and archival project related to Chinese culture, translation and thought,โ€ run by noted China scholar Geremie R. Barmรฉ.
  • China Internet Watchย — Run by a Singapore consulting company looking at Chinese digital trends.
  • China Labour Bulletinย — Labor issues and the plight of migrant workers in China, based in Hong Kong.
  • China Law Blogย — โ€œDiscussing the practical aspects of Chinese law and how it impacts business there,โ€ a longtime blog by Dan Harris.
  • China Law Translateย — A community-contributed reference for understanding Chinaโ€™s laws.
  • China Media Projectย — News and analysis on Chinese media.
  • China Policyย — โ€œA globally recognised research and strategic advisory based in Beijing.โ€
  • China Policy Institute: Analysisย — Chinese politics, economics, and international relations.
  • China Sports Insiderย — โ€œSports business news and analysis in China and Asia,โ€ by Mark Dreyer.
  • ChinaMedย — Research on the relations between China and the wider Mediterranean region (North Africa, Middle East, and South Europe) and the impact of their development on regional and global dynamics.
  • China-US Focusย — Essays on China and international relations (not just U.S.-China relations) by a variety of writers.
  • Chinese politics from the provincesย — โ€œViews and analysis of Chinese politics and policy from inside China, outside the Beijing and Shanghai beltways.โ€
  • Chublic Opinionย — โ€œPublic opinion with Chinese characteristics, a monthly digest of events that are shaping public opinion in China,โ€ by Ma Tianjie.
  • The Cleaver Quarterlyย — All about Chinese food.
  • The Harbingerย — โ€œThe Harbinger conducts exclusive Q&A with China’s top VCs, startup founders, and other KOLs.โ€
  • Jing Dailyย — Luxury brands and their Chinese customers.
  • MacroPoloย — The Paulson Instituteโ€™s China website, run by seasoned analysts and China-watchers.
  • NeoChaย — A website that highlights art and photography across Asia.
  • NPC Observerย — A blog covering developments from the powerful National Peopleโ€™s Congress (NPC) and the NPC Standing Committee.
  • Paper Republicย — Chinese literature in translation.
  • Radii Chinaย — โ€œChina from all angles.โ€
  • Thatsmags.comย — Includes sections for Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Tianjin, and Suzhou.
  • WAGICย — Acronym for โ€œWomen and Gender in China,โ€ a much-needed newcomer (launched in September) to the China news scene.
  • The World of Chineseย — A website and magazine providing insight into Chinese language and culture for students of the country.
  • Yicai Globalย — โ€œBringing you the latest on business, finance, economy, IT and TMT in China.โ€

Twitter

Thereโ€™s New York Timesย star Beijing correspondent and online wag Chris Buckley, and then there is everyone else. Buckley is the China-watcher in every China-watcherโ€™s timeline.

Sorry, everyone else.

(Psst: If you are really looking for people to follow, see foreign correspondents and bureau chiefs listed next to their publication names below โ€” and @supchinanews, where we regularly retweet our favorites.)

Podcasts

A small sampling of what we listen to.

The China Africa Project, “a multimedia resource dedicated to exploring every aspect of Chinaโ€™s growing engagement with Africa.”

The China History Podcast, Laszlo Montgomery’s one-man shows continues to go strong seven years after its debut.

Environment China, discussions (in English and Chinese) with those studying or working on environmental protection in China, by the Beijing Energy Network.

Wo Men Podcast, produced and hosted by two Chinese women who discuss weekly topics and share stories and views about their lives in China from the inside.

Little Red Podcast, “interviews and chat celebrating China beyond the Beijing beltway from the University of Melbourne’s Horwood Studios,” hosted by academic Graeme Smith and journalist Louisa Lim.

Romance of the Three Kingdoms Podcast, John Zhu retells one of China’s greatest stories, one episode at a time. (For more details, listen to this episode of the Sinica Podcast.)

Newsletters

Sinocism, Bill Bishopโ€™s long running newsletter on politics and business, now by paid subscription only, or in free weekly formย with Axios.

Trivium, focusing on politics and economics; we love the typeface.

Chinafornia, Matthew Sheehanโ€™s look at U.S.-China relations.

Changpian, by Dutch journalist Tabitha Speelman, which aggregates nonfiction writing.

The Magpie Digest, โ€œa weekly exploration of contemporary China, one trending topic at a time,โ€ by Christina Xu, Pheona Chen, and Tricia Wang.

Mingbai, newcomers to the newsletter scene, they are short and digestible, sending one fun tidbit every day.

U.S. China Week, by Graham Webster.

State and Mainstream Chinese Media

How is a reader to know when to use state media sources, and how to identify reliable information on China? Thereโ€™s an article on The China Projectย for that.

Some of the most important news sources are official state media outlets. You just have to know where to look. For exampleโ€ฆ

  • Xinhua News Agency, the central news bureau in China. Sets standards โ€” including banned wordsย โ€” for all other state-run news in China. In English, in Chinese.
  • The Peopleโ€™s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party. In English, in Chinese.
  • The Global Times, a newspaper and website under the auspices of the Peopleโ€™s Daily, known for attention-grabbing ultra-nationalist opinion pieces (which areย sometimes representative of mainstream thinking in the Chinese government). In English, in Chinese.
  • China Daily, the largest-circulation English-language publication based in China, established in 1981. Read it here.

Other notable mainstream media sources from China:

  • CCTV, or China Central Television, available here.
  • CGTN, or China Global Television Network, is CCTVโ€™s overseas branch, available in English here.
  • China Plus, the English news channel of China Radio International, which plays a similar overseas role as CGTN, available here.
  • Shanghai Daily, a very underrated English-language outlet now in a slick new media format as SHINE, available here.
  • Sina Newsย ๆ–ฐๆตช, available here.
  • Toutiaoย ไปŠๆ—ฅๅคดๆก, literally โ€œtodayโ€™s headlines,โ€ available here.
  • Southern Weeklyย ๅ—ๆ–นๅ‘จๆœซ, available here.
  • QQ.comย ่…พ่ฎฏ็ฝ‘, by Tencent, one of Chinaโ€™s largest web portals, available here.

How is a reader to know whether an op-ed, commentary, or other article in these central state-media outlets is representative of the Chinese governmentโ€™s official view? Thereโ€™s an article on The China Projectย for that.

Chinese Video Reporting

Although most video you’ll see out of China is likely produced by Chinese state media or Western outlets, there are a few independent video sites that produce unique reportage. The China Projectย often draws on these sources when finding viral videos.

Chinese Social Media

The two largest social networks in China are Weibo (ๅพฎๅš wฤ“ibรณ) and WeChat (ๅพฎไฟก wฤ“ixรฌn). Although they were originally compared with Twitter (for Weibo) and Facebook Messenger or WhatsApp (for WeChat), they have evolved far beyondย those molds in recent years. Read a guide to Chinese social media on The China Project. Translations of viral content and controversies on Weibo in particular often form the basis of the Society and Cultureย section of The China Projectโ€™s newsletter.

Media From Around the World

None of the media listed belowย have a focus on China per se, but all have published useful pieces on China in the past year.ย When the outlets have notable China correspondents or bureau chiefs active on Twitter, we have linked to their Twitter profiles.

African continent

Australia:

Canada:

Ethiopia

France

Germany:

Hong Kong:

Note: We highly recommend the South China Morning Post, Hong Kongโ€™s leading newspaper, as a daily source of China news.

Japan:

India:

Malaysia:

New Zealand:

South Korea:

Pakistan:

The Philippines:

Qatar:

Singapore:

South Africa:

Taiwan:

United Kingdom:

United States:

~

We hope thatโ€™s enough reading and exploring for now. But remember, if you ever find yourself exhausted, thereโ€™s one website willing to do all the legwork for you:

This one.

Sign up for our newsletter. Subscribe to the Sinica Podcast. Follow us on Twitterย and Facebook. And watch out in 2018 — we have big things planned.