Constructive discussions
Dear Access member,
Below you can find details of three upcoming The China Project events, followed by our usual summary of todayโs news from China.
Have a great weekend!
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
Beijing: Female science-fiction writers
At the Beijing Bookworm literary festival on March 31, you can attend a spirited discussion hosted by the NรผVoices Collective with authors Tรกng Fฤi ็ณๅช and Jฤซ Shวotรญng ๅงฌๅฐไบญ (link in Chinese), two up-and-coming writers on Chinaโs burgeoning science-fiction scene.
New York: Free beer and pizza…and Howard French
Free beer and pizza will be available for the audience of our live taping of the Sinica Podcast with Howard W. French of Columbia University on April 3. French is a career foreign correspondent and the author of five books, including three works of nonfiction, a work of documentary photography, and a forthcoming memoir of his life in journalism. The China Project Access members get in free. Details here.
New York: Womenโs Conference: Only 2 days left for early-bird tickets!
We are hosting our third annual The China Project Womenโs Conference in New York on May 20, 2019. Itโs a conference about business, technology, and finance in the U.S.-China sphere with an all-female lineup of star panelists.
If youโd like to attend the conference, buy your tickets now, as early-bird prices (a 25 percent discount!) only run until March 31. As an Access member, be sure to claim your additional 10 percent off any ticket with the promo code SCWCACCESS2019.
Also, this year, we are once again going to honor The China Project Female Rising Stars for recognizable professional success in the early years of their career, one in business and one from the nonprofit sector. Please submit your nominations before the deadline of April 5 to events@thechinaproject.com. Click here for more information and for nomination criteria.
1. Trade war day 267 โ โconstructive discussionsโ
The second day of U.S.-China trade negotiations wrapped up in Beijing, and both sides sent out mildly positive and tight-lipped statements (relevant excerpts below). Itโs anyoneโs guess what this means:
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Statement of the United States Regarding China Talks / White House
The two parties continued to make progress during candid and constructive discussions on the negotiations and important next steps.
The United States looks forward to the meetings planned with Vice Premier Liu He and the Chinese delegation in Washington next week.
The two sides discussed the related text of an agreement and achieved new progress.
(The Chinese text reads the same.)
Beijing-based economic consultancy Trivium has its own take on the status of progress towards a deal, based on developments over the past month:
It now looks unlikely that [Trump and Xi] will meet before JuneโฆA deal, which seemed so close a month ago, now seems much more unlikely.
This assessment is largely based on how Trump seems to have spooked Beijing by walking away from Hanoi without a deal with Kim Jong-un, and by saying that he wants to keep some of the tariffs in place even with a deal.
Other trade-related links:
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Preventing losses in translation
China, U.S. Pore Over Details of Trade War Text Agreement / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โNegotiators have been working line-by-line through the textโฆto ensure there were no discrepancies in the English- and Chinese-language versions of the textโฆThe focus on the joint wording has become a key issue after U.S. officials complained that Chinese versions of the text had walked back or omitted commitments made by negotiators, the officials said. The two sides have very different understandings of certain words, according to one of the officials, who noted that Chinaโs Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen started his career as a translator at the ministry.โ
โThe U.S. focus on translation issues came after negotiators felt China was backtracking on previous commitments it made on IP and tech issues. After the latest round of face-to-face talks, Chinese negotiators frustrated U.S. officials by sending back text on IP with entire sections crossed out that had already been agreed to by Lighthizer and Liu, people familiar with the situation said.โ ย
Lost in translation? How verbal mishaps and lack of Chinese-language document threaten US-China trade deal / SCMP
When it comes to negotiating with China, the devil is in the details / Washington Post
Neil Thomas, a research associate at MacroPolo, writes about how โIn December 1978, in their rush to normalize bilateral ties with China, U.S. diplomats blundered by allowing Beijing to slip an important change into the Chinese text of the Joint Communique on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations.โ -
Lasting effects of trade war
US-China soy trade war could destroy 13 million hectares of rainforest / Guardian
โThe Amazon rainforest could be the greatest casualty of the trade war between the United States and China, warns a new study showing how deforestation pressures have surged as a result of the geopolitical jolt in global soy markets.โ
Who Is Winning Trump’s Trade War with China? So Far, It’s Mexico / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โAmericaโs imports from Mexico surge the most in seven years as Trumpโs policies shift supply chains.โ
Corporate Boards Are Pessimistic About Trade Between the U.S. and China / Harvard Business Review
Michael Witt writes, โIn a recent study I led at INSEAD we surveyed 109 board members from across the globe about the likelihood of this โnew Cold War scenarioโ between the U.S. and China, with two separate blocs with trade and investment flows between them curtailed or outlawed. Almost three quarters of respondents in primary industries and manufacturing โ and 50% of those in service industries โ believe that such a scenario is likely. And a solid majority across all three sectors (including 71% in primary industries and 53% in services) expect a negative or very negative impact on their businesses as a result.โ -
Trump administration rhetoric
Chinaโs island-building and โBelt and Road Initiativeโ are part of same defence strategy, says US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo / SCMP
โLucas Niewenhuis
2. Is China expecting an apology from New Zealand?
The New Zealand Herald reports:
Improving access to China for exports of New Zealand wood and paper products are among key areas of focus for Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in her talks in Beijing next Mondayโฆ Ardern said progressing the upgrade of the 11-year-old free trade agreement with China was among prioritiesโฆ
โฆAlso on the agenda is likely to be New Zealand’s decision to join other nations late last year in accusing Chinese government agencies of coordinated cyber attacks and the decision by the Government Communications Security Bureau’s decision not to allow equipment from Chinese telecommunications provider Huawei to be included in the country’s 5G, next generation internet infrastructure.
Asked whether she would raise the cyber attacks, Ardern said she hadn’t “finalized everything I intend to raiseโโฆ
โฆWith the eyes of the Muslim world on Ardern’s response to the Christchurch mosque attacks, she said she would reassert New Zealand’s consistently expressed concern about the treatment of China’s Uighur Muslim minority, which is the subject of a massive security surveillance and โre-educationโ programme as Beijing seeks to shut down the potential for domestic Islamic terrorism.
Nationalist rag Global Times โ which is not the official voice of the Chinese government but does a very good job of representing the Partyโs id โ is expecting an apology tour:
New Zealand PM to begin ties-mending visit to China
Key points to be observed include New Zealand’s attitude on Chinese firms’ participation on its 5G network construction, and whether there is new commitment on the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in the run-up to the second Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation to be held in Beijing in Aprilโฆ
โฆBut the issue is: will the Ardern administration stop actions that damage China-New Zealand ties.
3. Huawei profits jump 25 percent
Reuters reports that โHuawei Technologies, the worldโs third-largest smartphone maker, reported a 25 percent jump in 2018 net profit, buoyed by a solid performance in its home market and a booming smartphone business.โ
Other Huawei news:
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Huawei urges US to drop “loser’s attitude” as carrier business revenue slips / Reuters
โChina’s Huawei Technologies called on Washington to drop the โloser’s attitudeโ and once again rubbished U.S. allegations its gear could be used by Beijing for spying, as its network business weakened amid mounting global scrutiny.โ -
Thailand moves forward with Chinese tech company huawei to build 5G network / NPR
โThe Chinese company Huawei is now building and testing Thailand’s first 5G network. Thai authorities say they could not say no to Huawei’s bargain prices, despite pressure from the U.S.โ
โJeremy Goldkorn
—–
Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact me anytime at jeremy@thechinaproject.com.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:
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On his Europe trip, Xi Jinping persuaded Italy to sign on to the Belt and Road, and then met with French President Emmanuel Macron. Macron was less keen on Belt and Road, and shares the concerns about increasing Chinese influence of many European leaders, but nonetheless scored wins as France signed 15 business contracts with China, including a 300-plane order for Airbus worth 30 billion euros ($33.94 billion).
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Famous liberal intellectual Xว Zhฤngrรนn ่ฎธ็ซ ๆถฆ, a professor of law at Tsinghua University in Beijing, was suspended and put under investigation. A parallel but opposite case of a not famous professor of Marxism at Tsinghua being denounced by students for imperfectly towing the Xi Jinping line, and being placed under investigation, was reported by The China Project yesterday.
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Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan said that he does โnot know muchโ about the internment camps in Xinjiang or Chinaโs treatment of Muslim minorities. Given Pakistanโs financial dependence on China, itโs unlikely that Khan will be motivated to learn any more about what is going on in Xinjiang.
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U.S.-China trade talks in Beijing had either โmoved forward in all areasโ or had stalled and could take a โfew more weeksโ or even โmonthsโ to finish, depending on which Trump administration official you went by.
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The European Union declined to make a policy on Huawei, at least for now, and instead gave its member states until July 15 to write their own reports on risk assessments of 5G technology.
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Tencent is starting to get more scrutiny from western observers over its role in surveillance and repression in Xinjiang, its connection to the security services, how it censors user conversations, and more.
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Canada should โcorrect the mistakes it made earlier,โ the Chinese foreign ministry said, making clear that the recent blocking of Canadian canola oil at customs is a retaliatory measure for the country approved extradition proceedings for Huawei CFO Mรจng Wวnzhลu ๅญๆ่.
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The city of Jinan in Shandong Province was somewhat late to capitalize on the astronomical growth in the digital media business, but it has finally carved out an unconventional niche as Chinaโs internet censorship capital.
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A third U.S. navy transit through the Taiwan Strait in three months happened on March 24 โ one of several U.S.-China relations updates from Monday.
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The SenseNet facial-recognition data leak was discussed in detail in the most recent ChinAI newsletter.
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Nana Ou-Yang ๆฌง้ณๅจๅจ, the teen Taiwanese artist who was nearly cancelled by Chinese internet users last week due to her perceived ambiguous position on Taiwanโs relationship with mainland China, has gone further to align herself with Beijingโs views on Taiwan.
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The shadow of 19th- and 20th-century history hangs over U.S.-China relations, as Beijing sees it as imperative that a trade deal not be seen as China โsurrenderingโ to a western nation as it had centuries ago. Meanwhile, the widely reviled former Trump advisor Steve Bannon helped restart the paranoid anti-communist organization The Committee on the Present Danger with a focus on China, which it called an โaggressive totalitarian foe.โ
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Female wealth managers are becoming more common at global banks including UBS, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and HSBC Holding Plc, as there is a need to โmake Chinese clients โ and increasingly Chinese women clients โ feel comfortable,โ Bloomberg reported.
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Debt and dealing with the slowing economy
China pours more money into cheap loans to help regions deal with debt pile and aid economy / SCMP
โChina will look to tackle existing debt piles and contain the โgrey rhinoโ risk in heavily indebted regions with a pilot programme to restore local financial capability.โ
Video interview: China’s banks will be cautious on small business loans, says Creditsights’s Marshall / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โDavid Marshall, senior analyst for Asian banks at Creditsights, discusses the PBOCโs call on banks to increase lending to small and private business and his outlook on non-performing loans.โ -
996 work culture
โDevelopersโ lives matterโ โ Chinese software engineers use Github to protest against the countryโs 996 work schedule / SCMP
Resentment against long working hours in Chinaโs tech industry is growing among software developers that use the Github open development platform after a user posted a copy of Chinaโs labour laws on the site and named two e-commerce companies that practice the 996 work schedule โ 9am to 9pm, six days a weekโฆThe post also named Chinese e-commerce firms Youzan and JD.com as practising 996.
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Jack Ma: Hero or scoundrel?
Alibaba accuses Meituan CEO of libel for questioning founderโs integrity / TechNode
โFollowing controversial comments by the CEO of Meituan about Alibaba founder Jack Ma (้ฉฌไบ Mว Yรบn) for โan integrity problem,โ the two Chinese internet giants are engaging once again in a public spat, with Alibaba leaders accusing the Meituan executive of defamation.โ -
Goldman Sachs helps CIC get around U.S. scrutiny
Goldman’s China-backed fund bucks trade tensions to buy U.S. firm / Reuters
โGoldman Sachs Group Inc invested money from Chinaโs sovereign wealth fund in a California-based industrial company and is looking for more U.S. dealsโฆCIC’s novel partnership with Goldman illustrates how China is adapting to U.S. curbs on its deal-making, which resulted in Chinese acquisitions of U.S. companies plunging by 88 percent year-on-year in 2018.โ -
Electric cars: NIO takes off the gloves
Chinese EV car maker NIO restricts its IPO banks from working for rivals – sources / Reuters
โChinese electric vehicle (EV) maker NIO Inc has blocked the eight top investment banks that did its IPO from working for rivals by tying them up in rare year-long non-compete clausesโฆThe move highlights the fierce competition between China’s EV makers as they seek the capital needed to survive in a fast-growing market.โ -
What to do with your Alibaba billions
Joseph Tsai in talks to buy Barclays Center, become majority owner of Nets / New York Post
โJoseph Tsai [่กๅดไฟก Cร i Chรณngxรฌn], the billionaire co-founder of Alibaba, is in talks to buy Brooklynโs Barclays Center and the new Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale from Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov.โ
SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:
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Healthcare ethics
Exit, voice and loyalty: Competing logics for Chinese citizens faced with unethical behaviour by health professionals / Asia Dialogue
โIn China, inappropriate incentive structures have encouraged health care providers to systematically offer treatment which is not medically indicated and to take extra money for treatment which has already been paid for.โ
See also on The China Project: What sils Chinaโs healthcare system? Roberta Lipson has a detailed diagnosis. -
Endangered animal trafficking
As China pushes traditional medicine globally, illegal wildlife trade flourishes / Reuters
โOne of the most alarming characteristics of wildlife trafficking is the growing use of threatened species in traditional medicines,โ conservation group ADM Capital Foundation said in a recent report.
It identified the traditional Chinese medicine industry as accounting for more than three-quarters of the trade in endangered wildlife products in Hong Kong over the past 5 years.
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China cracks 9 pangolin smuggling gangs as demand for endangered mammal remains high / SCMP
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Milk and the environment
Can the world quench China’s bottomless thirst for milk? / Guardian
โChinaโs leaders have championed milk as the emblem of a modern, affluent society โ but their radical plan to triple the nationโs consumption will have a huge environmental cost.โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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No thinking, please, this is a university
Heads or tails โ criticism and Xu Zhangrun / China Heritage
Translations of messages of support for, and a poem by Tsinghua law professor Xว Zhฤngrรนn ่ฎธ็ซ ๆถฆ who has been relieved from his teaching duties and is โunder investigation.โ ย
What does the punishment of a prominent scholar mean for intellectual freedom in China? / ChinaFile
See also on Twitter from journalist Christian Shepherd: โTรกng Yรบn ๅไบ, an associate professor at Chongqing Normal University, was stripped of his teaching qualifications and demoted for saying things that โdamaged the nation’s reputationโ in a class about writer Lว Xรนn ้ฒ่ฟ .
ไธญๅ ฑๆ่ฒ้จๅ ็ปๅ ณไบๅ ๅผบๅๆน่ฟ้ซๆ ก้ขๅฏผๅนฒ้จๆทฑๅ ฅๅบๅฑ่็ณปๅญฆ็ๅทฅไฝ็้็ฅ / Ministry of Education
Journalist Emily Feng on Twitter: โStrong language from [Ministry of Education] on cadre work in universities: “The Party secretary and principal should enter classroom, dormsโฆLeaders will give at least one ideological and political theory/semester, and contact students ‘face to face’ at least once a week.” -
Xinjiang and Tibet
Chinese camp system evolving into Xinjiang Archipelago? / Eurasia.net
โAn individualโs level of religious devotion and Chinese-language skills are factors determining the severity of punishment,โ according to a Turkish researcher.
China thanks Kazakhstan for โsupportโ of Xinjiang crackdown / AFP via HKFP
Chinese foreign minister Chinese FM Wรกng Yรฌ ็ๆฏ met his Kazakh counterpart who said โโunderstands and supports the measures taken by Chinaโs Xinjiang regionโ to rein in terrorism, separatism and extremism.โ Wang replied: โWe appreciate the Kazakhstan governmentโs understanding and support for Chinaโs position.โ ย
AAS statement on extra-judicial detention of Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang, PRC / Association for Asian Studies
Foreign journalist access to Tibet ย / Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China
โWhile a security crackdown in Xinjiang generates headlines, very little is known about the situation further south in Tibet, which is effectively closed to journalists. A new FCCC Position Paper issues a call to change that.โ -
China and Jaish-e-Mohammad
US steps up efforts to blacklist Masood Azhar, forcing Chinaโs hand / Livemint
โThe US on [March 28] introduced a resolution in the UN Security Council to get Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) chief Masood Azhar listed as a terrorist, two weeks after China stalled a similar effort, leading to a sharp exchange between Washington and Beijing.โ
Wrong to say we shelter terrorists, says China / Khaleej Times (UAE)
โChina on Friday said it was wrong to accuse it of sheltering terrorists because it put a technical hold on the resolution to blacklist Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) terror group chief Masood Azhar as its decision was in line with the rules of an anti-terrorism panel at the UN.โ -
Belt and Road
‘Too few jobs and too much debt’: UN rights envoy warns Laos of favouring China’s Belt and Road over its people / SCMP
โA United Nations human rights expert has urged communist-ruled Laos to focus less on foreign-invested dam and railway contracts and devote more resources to helping its children and the poor.โ
ไธญๅฝ็คพ็ง้ขๅๅธไธๅธฆไธ่ทฏ่็ฎไนฆ๏ผ็ฌฌไบๅฑ้ซๅณฐ่ฎบๅไธๅคงไบฎ็นๅฏๆ / The Paper
Tom Baxter from China Dialogue summarized some takeaways from this piece in a Twitter thread: “Yesterday Citic Foundation and China Academy of Social Science released their 4th annual โBlue Book on the Belt and Roadโ, giving an overview of BRI investments, EPC contracts etc.โ -
Sinophobia and the Beijing influence debate in Australia
Why do some Chinese-Australians feel targeted by the Government’s new foreign influence laws? / Australian ABC
The main point of contention is the new Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme, which quietly came into effect earlier this month, and is basically a publicly available list of political lobbyists working “on behalf of” a foreign power. Former Cabinet ministers and Government officials will also need to register if they start working for a foreign organisation.
But leaders within Australia’s Chinese communities are frustrated with the law’s ambiguous language,as well as the lack of consultation, which has left many unsure about whether they needed to sign up.
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Indonesia and Chinese money
Indonesia election: Widodo has courted Chinese cash. Heโs about to find out the cost / SCMP
โCritics accuse President Joko Widodo of not protecting the countryโs national interests in his drive to attract foreign investment from Beijing.โ -
Under-reporting swine fever
Swine fever tests China’s transparency credentials / Reuters
โAfrican swine fever is testing Chinaโs transparency credentials. Grains trader Cargill is the latest company to cite outbreaks of the highly contagious hog disease as a drag on business. Itโs likely to fuel fears that the worldโs biggest pork producer may be under-reporting the issue. That taint adds to a fast-spreading problem for Beijing.โ -
Suppression of religion
China city offers cash for information in religion crackdown / AP via Star Tribune
โA notice posted on the official website of the Guangzhou Department of Ethnic and Religious Affairs said up to 10,000 yuan ($15,000) would be paid for verified information and assistance in hunting down key members and leaders of illegal foreign religious groups and revealing their structures.โ -
Excluding Taiwan
Taiwan blasts China over its ‘barbaric behavior’ in Czech Republic / Focus Taiwan
โTaiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday blasted China for what it called โbarbaric behaviorโ after Taiwan’s representative in the Czech Republic was forced out of an economic meeting held recently in the Central European country.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Shenanigans at the Xuzhou International Marathon
Uncivilized, shameful and scandalous โ Xuzhou marathon marred by bizarre behavior / SCMP
โLast weekendโs marathon staged in Chinaโs Jiangsu Province attracted scorn both on and off the track with a woman runner brazenly using a bicycle during the marathon, while there were cases of looting from bystanders after boxes of bananas and water bottles placed along the race route were taken away for personal consumption.โ -
Education and pseudoscience
Brain scan or brain scam? Shenzhen authorities investigate school’s use of ‘IQ machine’ / SCMP
โEducation authorities in southern China are investigating reports that a privately run school in Shenzhen used a pseudoscientific โbrain scannerโ to measure its pupils’ intellectual potential.โ -
Painting
Bodies in darkness and light / Neocha
โHer process for this series began with setting the lights and photographing her subjectsโฆ Based on the photos, she then drew on the canvas, painted the first layer, waited several days for it to dry, and then painted the second layer. It took her years to complete the entire series.โ -
LGBT rights and film censorship
Chinese gay rights activists out to challenge censored cut of Freddie Mercury movie Bohemian Rhapsody / SCMP
โCampaigners say they find cinema-goers are baffled by edits to Bohemian Rhapsody.โ A Beijing activist wrote to the film censors to ask for an explanation for the bowdlerization of the film. -
Sexual misconduct amd #MeToo censorship
Chinese university strips dean of duties amid sexual misconduct investigation / SCMP
Dร i Sลngyuรกn ๆดๆพๅ , 52, dean of North China Electric Power Universityโs school of renewable energy in Beijing, has been dismissed โafter claims surfaced online that he sexually abused a woman colleague and harassed students.โ
Censored on WeChat: #MeToo in China / Global Voices
โOur data set indicates that online allegations of sexual misconduct were one of the most heavily censored topics on WeChat in 2018.โ -
Why the creepy Tom Hiddleston ad is secretly brilliant
Tom Hiddleston: Why China loves the ‘creepy’ Centrum ad / BBC
โCreepy, uncomfortable and downright weird are just some things an advertisement starring Tom Hiddleston has been called, but none of that will matter as it’s found success with its intended audience โ Chinese women, as the BBC’s Yvette Tan explains.โ
VIDEO ON SUPCHINA
A video recap: Top 5 news this week
From the ongoing trade talks between the U.S. and China to Huawei to a silenced professor at Tsinghua University, here are five things we covered this week.
We also published the following videos this week:
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
Subtle Asian Traits: The Facebook group rallying Asian youth around the world
Memes, jokes, stories of shared common experiencesโฆthey’re all on Subtle Asian Traits, a Facebook group that began among a few Chinese-Australian friends before ballooning into a community of more than 1 million people, mostly English-speaking Asians, from around the world. Numerous spin-off groups have been created, such as Subtle Asian Dating (slyly abbreviated as SAD). But fun as they are, these groups alternate between bringing the Asian diaspora together and splitting it apart.
Thicker than blood: A young Chinese woman’s coming of age
For a young Chinese woman, pursuing a career in the physical sciences implies defying societal expectations of a womanโs body, intellect, and obligation to put family first. It may also mean disobeying a motherโs wishes. Yangyang Cheng, in this month’s Science and China column, writes about her coming of age: “I am my motherโs missed period. Our bond is thicker than blood. The crimson tide tells a story of four generations of Chinese women, their loss and pain, birth and survival, pride and shame.”
The Massachusetts train company that China built
Western Massachusetts is likely not the first place that comes to mind when talking about U.S.-China cooperation, particularly amid the current trade war. But it’s here, in Springfield, Massachusetts, that one Chinese company is striving to create a brick-and-mortar identity for itself on American soil, with employees hailing from both sides of the Pacific. CRRC MA has won several contracts to build trains for urban rail lines in the U.S., and along the way, has promoted local initiatives praised by politicians at all levels.
The China Project Quiz: U.S.-China Diplomatic History
How much do you know about the history of U.S.-China relations? Take this 12-question quiz to find out. Let us know how you do โ tweet your score to @supchinanews.
Kuora: China has grand ambitions, but these factors are holding it back
What are the biggest problems, e.g., economic, social, cultural, et cetera, facing China as it redevelops into a world power? The below is Kaiser Kuo’s quick-and-dirty โ and incomplete โ list. Please note that it conveys a pessimism about the country’s future that isn’t an accurate reflection of Kaiser’s actual outlook, which falls a good bit short of blithely optimistic but is, nonetheless, not utterly bleak.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Podcast: Samm Sacks on the U.S.-China tech relationship
This live Sinica Podcast recorded in New York on March 6 features Samm Sacks, Cybersecurity Policy and China Digital Economy Fellow at New America. She and Kaiser Kuo discuss the many facets of U.S.-China technology integration and competition, touching on topics such as data security, artificial intelligence, and how to build โa small yard with a high fence.โ
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Subscribe to the Sinica Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 81
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: the ongoing trade war talks between U.S. and Chinese officials, an explosion at a chemical plant in eastern China, the development of the so-called Jing-Jin-Ji ไบฌๆดฅๅ cluster, and more.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher.
NรผVoices Podcast: โBlack Mirrorโ China and Dystopian Female Futures with Cate Cadell
In episode 13 of the NรผVoices podcast, co-hosts Alice Xin Liu and Sophie Lu interview Cate Cadell, a tech writer for Reuters who is based in Beijing. Cate covers Chinese tech companies with a focus on cybersecurity, AI, surveillance, censorship, and ethics issues.
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Subscribe to the NรผVoices Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.