Book of Taowu (Chinese Edition) by Jiang Lan
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Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
China Data Supplement October 2006 J People’s Republic of China J Hong Kong SAR J Macau SAR J Taiwan ISSN 0943-7533 China aktuell Data Supplement – PRC, Hong Kong SAR, Macau SAR, Taiwan 1 Contents The Main National Leadership of the PRC 2 LIU Jen-Kai The Main Provincial Leadership of the PRC 30 LIU Jen-Kai Data on Changes in PRC Main Leadership 37 LIU Jen-Kai PRC Agreements with Foreign Countries 44 LIU Jen-Kai PRC Laws and Regulations 48 LIU Jen-Kai Hong Kong SAR 49 Political, Social and Economic Data LIU Jen-Kai Macau SAR 56 Political, Social and Economic Data LIU Jen-Kai Taiwan 60 Political, Social and Economic Data LIU Jen-Kai ISSN 0943-7533 All information given here is derived from generally accessible sources. Publisher/Distributor: GIGA Institute of Asian Affairs Rothenbaumchaussee 32 20148 Hamburg Germany Phone: +49 (0 40) 42 88 74-0 Fax: +49 (040) 4107945 2 October 2006 The Main National Leadership of the PRC LIU Jen-Kai Abbreviations and Explanatory Notes CCP CC Chinese Communist Party Central Committee CCa Central Committee, alternate member CCm Central Committee, member CCSm Central Committee Secretariat, member PBa Politburo, alternate member PBm Politburo, member Cdr. Commander Chp. Chairperson CPPCC Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference CYL Communist Youth League Dep. P.C. Deputy Political Commissar Dir. Director exec. executive f female Gen.Man. General Manager Gen.Sec. General Secretary Hon.Chp. Honorary Chairperson H.V.-Chp. Honorary Vice-Chairperson MPC Municipal People’s Congress NPC National People’s Congress PCC Political Consultative Conference PLA People’s Liberation Army Pol.Com. -
12Th IEEE PES Asia-Pacific Power and Energy Engineering Conference
12th IEEE PES Asia-Pacific Power and Energy Engineering Conference 12th IEEE PES Asia-Pacific Power and Energy Engineering Conference IEEE APPEEC 2020 PROGRAM AT A GLANCE Time 21 Sept. 2020 (Monday) 08:30-09:05 Opening Ceremony Keynote Session I Development of Various Flexible Demand Resources for Harmonizing Fluctuating Renewable Energy 09:05-09:40 Yonghua Song, Director of State Key Laboratory of Internet of Things for Smart City and Rector of University of Macau, Macao, China ( Zijin Ballroom A) Keynote Session II The Carbon Footprint in the Global Electric Power Sector: How is this Problem Being Addressed 09:40-10:10 Saifur Rahman, Joseph Loring Professor & Director, Advanced Research Institute Virginia Tech, USA President of IEEE Power & Energy Society 2018 and 2019 (Zijin Ballroom A) 10:10-10:30 Morning Break Keynote Session III Analysis and control of sub-synchronous oscillation of DFIG with Power Grid 10:30-11:00 Feng Wu, Professor, Dean of Energy and Electrical Engineering College at Hohai University, China (Zijin Ballroom A) Keynote Session IV Volt-Var Control in Power Distribution System 11:00-11:30 Bikash Pal, Professor of Power Systems at Imperial College London (ICL) (Zijin Ballroom A) Keynote Session V Application of Big Data in Power Industry 11:30-12:00 Dean Sharafi, Group Manager - System Management, Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO), Australia (Zijin Ballroom A) 12:00-13:30 Lunch ( L Cafe ) Oral Session: Oral Session: Online Oral Session: Power Oral Session: Power Power System Power System Session 13:30-15:30 System Analysis 1 System Analysis 2 Analysis 3 Analysis 4 (Board Room (Jiangning VIP Room) (Meeting Room 4) (Meeting Room 5) (Meeting Room 6) 3F) 15:30-15:45 Afternoon Break Oral Session: Oral Session: Online Oral Session: Power Oral Session: Power Integrated Energy Integrated Energy Session 15:45-17:45 System Analysis 5 System Analysis 6 Systems 1 Systems 2 (Board Room (Jiangning VIP Room) (Meeting Room 4) ( Meeting Room 5) ( Meeting Room 6) 3F) 18:00-20:00 Buffet ( L Cafe ) Time 22 Sept. -
Controlled Urbanization in China, 1949-1989
CONTROLLED URBANIZATION IN CHINA, 1949-1989 Sun Sheng HAN B.A., Tongji University, 1983 M.Sc., Asian Institute of Technology, 1987 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in the Department of Geography @ Sun Sheng HAN 1994 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY December 1994 All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without permission of the author. APPROVAL Name: Sun Sheng Han Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Title of Thesis: Controlled Urbanization In China, 1949- 1989 Examining Committee: Chair: R.D. Moore, Assistant Professor - S.T. Wong, Profess6r Senior Supervisor L.J.'EEm, Associate Professor YA.~.Brohman, Assistant Professor R. ~a~ter,'P'rofessor, Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University Internal Examiner Cllftok~.pax Professor Department of Geography University of Georgia External Examiner Date Approved: December 5, 1994 PARTIAL COPYRIGHT LICENSE I hereby grant to Simon Fraser University the right to lend my thesis, project or extended essay (the title of which is shown below) to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. I further agree that permission for multiple copying of this work for scholarly purposes may be granted by me or the Dean of Graduate Studies. It is understood that copying or publication of this work for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. -
The Promotion Mechanism of Political Elites in Reforming China
The Promotion Mechanism of Political Elites in Reforming China Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Rongrong Lin School of East Asian Studies August, 2015 Contents ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................ 4 LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................... 6 LIST OF TABLES ................................................................................................................ 8 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................. 12 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS ................................................................................................. 15 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................ 16 CHAPTER 2 REVIEW OF LITERATURE................................................................................ 31 2.1 HUMAN CAPITAL AFFECTING CAREER MOBILITY OUTCOMES ..................................................... 32 2.1.1 Education in Career Mobility ................................................................................. 33 2.1.2 Work Experience in Career Mobility ...................................................................... 36 2.1.3 Summary of Human Capital ................................................................................... 39 2.2 SOCIAL CAPITAL -
UC Santa Cruz UC Santa Cruz Electronic Theses and Dissertations
UC Santa Cruz UC Santa Cruz Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Opening Up the Northwest: Reimagining Xi'an and the Modern Chinese Frontier Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/87z489hj Author Tai, Jeremy Publication Date 2015 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA CRUZ OPENING UP THE NORTHWEST: REIMAGINING XI’AN AND THE MODERN CHINESE FRONTIER A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in HISTORY by Jeremy Tai June 2015 The Dissertation of Jeremy Tai is approved: _________________________________ Professor Gail Hershatter, chair _________________________________ Professor Emily Honig _________________________________ Professor Noriko Aso _____________________________ Tyrus Miller Vice Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies Copyright © by Jeremy Tai 2015 CONTENTS List of Figures……………………………………………………………………..…iv Abstract………………………………………………………………………………vi Acknowledgements…………………………………………………………………viii Introduction…………………………………………………………………………....1 Chapter 1: The Origins of the Northwest Question in China……………………...…16 Chapter 2: The Geography of National Defense……………………………………..72 Chapter 3: Everyday Life in 1930s Xi’an………………………...………………...107 Chapter 4: The Garden City and the Eyesores of Xi’an……………………………158 Chapter 5: Xi’an as a Producer City……………………………………………..…219 Epilogue…………………………………………………………………………….262 Bibliography……………………………………………………………………..…276 iii List of -
First in Command: Leaders, Political Institutions, and Economic Growth in China’S Counties
FIRST IN COMMAND: LEADERS, POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS, AND ECONOMIC GROWTH IN CHINA’S COUNTIES by David Janoff Bulman A dissertation submitted to Johns Hopkins University in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Baltimore, Maryland July 2014 © 2014 David J. Bulman All Rights Reserved David J. Bulman ABSTRACT In the mid-1990s, counties in China’s Anhui Province and the central and northern regions of Jiangsu Province had similar levels of development. Over the next two decades the Jiangsu counties grew much faster, becoming on average twice as rich as the Anhui counties. This dissertation develops a causal narrative explaining part of the regional variation in county outcomes by looking at the relationship between local leader economic roles, governance, and promotion incentives in an upwardly accountable political system. Relying on six in-depth county case studies as well as broader quantitative analyses, the dissertation seeks to answer three interrelated questions: What explains variation in China’s county-level economic outcomes? What is the role of County Party Secretaries in determining local growth outcomes? Why do County Party Secretaries emphasize particular developmental priorities? By selecting six counties that face each other across the Anhui/Jiangsu border, the study largely eliminates geographic, historical, and cultural explanations, focusing instead on divergent provincial institutions and policies. These mixed method approaches demonstrate the important economic roles played by County Party Secretaries in shaping the quality of local governance and the ability of counties to attract investment. Although this leadership role and the governance-growth relationship hold across provinces, the political promotion incentives given to county leaders vary. -
Falun Gong the Falung Gong Movement Was Banned in 1999. The
Last updated 6 March 2019 CHINA Falun Gong The Falung Gong movement was banned in 1999. The Minghui website1 monitors and documents the innumerable cases of arrests and imprisonment of their practitioners almost on a daily basis. See below a selection of such cases. Falun Gong practitioners are usually sentenced on the basis of the following articles of the Criminal Code: Article 300: Using a cult to undermine law enforcement Article 296: Holding an assembly without permission Article 293: Provocative and disturbing behaviour Article 290: Disturbance of public order Article 234: Intentional injury of another Article 232: Murder Article 105: Subversion2 Those marked in red are expected to be released in 2018. Name Date of Sentence / Place / city of Date of arrest / detention detention or release trial length arrest Collective Arrests CHANG 08/02/18 2 yrs. Guangjun; ZHANG Chuansheng CHEN 11/16 4 yrs. (Ms. Huan; Chen), 3 ½ WANG yrs. (Ms. Yini; Zhou and ZHOU Ms. Hongyan; Huang), 2 HUANG yrs. (Ms. 1 http://en.minghui.org/cc/10 2 http://www.ecoi.net/file_upload/2107_1313501296_chn36204.pdf Last updated 6 March 2019 Haiying Wang) GUO 14/07/14 6 yrs. Liaoning Province Zhenju, LI Xuepin, HONG Xiuyan, ZHANG Xueyan; WANG Qingzhong, ZHAO Xiuyan; GAO Hui; LI Yanrong HU, Cuilan; 26/12/17 18 months WU Aifang SUN Yajun; 07/04/15 3 ½ yrs. Jilin’s Women LI Guiqin; Prison ZHANG Xiuxiang; LIU Yan; QIAN Yujiu ZHENG 07/17 7 yrs. (Mr. Lushan County Qingshan; Zheng); 3 Detention Center YANG Wu; yrs. TANG Bao ZHENG 03/07/16 5 yrs. -
Chinese Netizens Sniff out Corruption Online
WORLD: FAREWELL TO HILLARY CLINTON P.20 | BUSINESS: TUSSLING OVER TARIFFS P.32 VOL.56 NO.2 JANUARY 10, 2013 WWW.BJREVIEW.COM WEB TRAP Chinese netizens sniff out corruption online RMB6.00 USD1.70 AUD3.00 GBP1.20 CAD2.60 CHF2.60 JPY188 邮发代号2-922·国内统一刊号:CN11-1576/G2 VOL.56 NO.2 JANUARY 10, 2013 CONTENTS THE DESK » A New Means of Supervision 02 14 Cover Story THIS WEEK COVER STORY WORLD » Clinton’s China Legacy 20 Hillary Clinton impacts ties » An EU Opening 22 Central and Eastern Europe closer to China NATION 28 Now, Watchmen Watching Nation Watches » Talk of the Township 26 Netizens on the lookout for corrupt Civic participation in China Show and Tell officials Swapping stories in human libraries BUSINESS » Time to Settle Tariff Disputes 32 Progress depends on trade resolution » More Proactive? 36 18 Moving toward tax reform World » Market Watch 40 CULTURE » Bridging Cultures 44 Learning from a veteran translator FORUM 38 Prosperity for All » How to Make It Easier to China stands firm on win-win policy Business Take a Taxi? 46 EXPAT’S EYE No Spring Chicken » The Spirit of Making Do 48 Scandal over hormone-pumped poultry A holiday away from home ©2013 Beijing Review, all rights reserved. ONLINE AT » WWW.BJREVIEW.COM BREAKING NEWS » SCAN ME » Using a QR code reader Beijing Review (ISSN 1000-9140) is published weekly for US$64.00 per year by Cypress Books, 360 Swift Avenue, Suite 48, South San Francisco, CA 94080, Periodical Postage Paid at South San Francisco, CA 94080. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Beijing Review, Cypress Books, 360