The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) seeks to hire a Staff Attorney to be based in
Beijing to work in its China Environmental Law project.
NRDC has worked in China with government agencies,
research institutes and civil society organizations to protect the environment
for over 10 years. In China, NRDC is working in the areas of
environmental public participation, NGO capacity building, environmental law
and litigation, energy efficiency, clean power, green buildings, and public
health. It works through research, international exchanges and trainings,
collaboration on the formulation of policies, regulations and standards and a
variety of other approaches.
Continue reading "Position: Staff Attorney, China Environmental Law Project, NDRC" »
The Information Office of the State Council issued a
white paper on the Chinese political party system on November 15, according to
a Xinhua article issued on the same date (English, Chinese).
The white paper emphasizes the dominant role of the
Communist Party in the Chinese political system, while stressing the importance
of political consultation between Party and non-Party members closely allied
with Party goals, including members from China's eight minor "democratic"
parties.
The white paper is the latest in a series of Party and
government directives that emphasize the importance of increased participation
and consultation between Party and non-Party members, under Party control, as a
means to improve national governance.
Continue reading "State Council White Paper Emphasizes Importance of Political Consultation Under Party Control " »
The Institute for International Research at the
Hopkins-Nanjing Center (HNC) is a joint research initiative of Johns Hopkins
University and Nanjing University and located in Nanjing, China.
This competition is open to professors, associate
professors and assistant professors, as well as established scholars holding
non-faculty appointments. PhD students whose dissertation research requires
work in Nanjing may also apply. While no financial support is available,
fellows will have an affiliation with the Center and be a part of the HNC
community.
Continue reading "Research Opportunity: Nanjing" »
What causes social unrest in China? Institutional failure.
That’s the message delivered by Yu Jianrong, Director of the Institute of Rural Development at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, in a series of speeches in California during late October. His comments underline the extent to which social unrest in China is directly linked to institutional problems that prevent the Chinese legal and political systems from effectively responding to mounting citizen grievances.
Continue reading "Yu Jianrong on Social Unrest in China" »
The Communist
Party committee in the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) issued a notice
calling for local MPS officials to implement policy directions established at
the 17th Party Congress, according to a summary of the notice posted on the
Chinese government’s website on November 6.
The notice
offers a good example of how centralized Party directives are transmitted through
the Chinese government apparatus. It
also offers some insight into the thinking of Party officials with regard to
ongoing public security issues.
Continue reading "17th Party Congress Policy Directives Spread Through Public Security Apparatus" »
Short answer – no. At least one website has reported that
recent reforms undertaken by the provincial government of Yunnan will "eliminate" the household registration (hukou) system. This isn't the case.
The announced Yunnan reforms will eliminate the distinction
between "agricultural" and "non-agricultural" hukou status, according to an
October 25 Xinhua article. Similar reforms have been announced by a number of other provinces and municipalities. But they do
not affect the requirement that migrants obtain local hukou in urban areas to
receive public services and benefits on an equal basis with other urban
residents.
Continue reading "Is Yunnan "Eliminating" the Hukou System?" »