Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (Record Group No

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (Record Group No Yale University Library Divinity School Library Microfilm listing for Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (Record Group No. 11) Microfilm is available for Series I-IV. See the full finding aid for the collection at http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/divinity.011. The microfilm can be purchased or requested via interlibrary loan. The microfilm of Series IV have been digitized. The numbers of reels that have been digitized are highlighted. Contact [email protected] for more information and to obtain copies for research purposes. Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges in China, Consolidate [...] Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, Record Group No. 11 - Page 7 Collection Contents Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges in China, Consolidated General File Box Folder Reel Description Date(s) Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges 1937-1944 in China, Consolidated General File This file is alphabetically arranged. Headings include topics, individual names, and names of organizations. Inclusive dates are provided for the material related to each heading, except in cases when a folder encompasses more than one heading. The original order and heading designation of the file have not been altered; cross references have not been added. In most cases, common sense will lead the researcher to discover that, for example, material related to the United Christian Missionary Society is located under "Disciples of Christ" and material related to the Rackham Fund is located under "Foundations--Rackham Fund." 1 1 1 Aldrich, Winthrop W. 1937-1944 1 1 Allen, G. F. 1943 1 2 Allocation of Emergency Funds 1937-1938 1 3-12 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign 1929-1945 Missions 1 13 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign 1942-1944 Missions: China Bulletins 1 14 American Bureau for Medical Aid to China 1937-1944 1 15 American Council for Learned Studies 1932-1942 1 16 American Export Lines, Inc. 1943-1944 1 17 American Friends Service Committee 1942-1944 1 18-20 1,2 American Library Association 1938-1945 2 21 2 American Medical Association -- American University 1930-1935 at Cairo 2 21 American Missions to Lepers/ American Red Cross 1944, 1940-1942 2 22 American Women's Hospitals of the American Medical 1942-1945 Women's Association 2 23 Anderson - 1936 2 23 Arnault 1938 2 24,25 Associated Mission Treasurers 1920-1944 2 26 Association of American Colleges - 1928-1937 2 27 Atherton 1937-1945 2 27 Atwater, Reginald M. 1940-1945 2 28 Ballou, Earle H. 1934-1944 2 29,30 Baltimore Committee 1939-1941 Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges in China, Consolidate [...] Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, Record Group No. 11 - Page 8 Box Folder Reel Description Date(s) 2 31-43 2,3 Baptist (American): American Baptist Foreign Mission 1922-1942 Jun Society 3 44-47 3 Baptist (American): American Baptist Foreign Mission 1942 Jul-1945 Society 3 48 Baptist (American): Emergency Bulletins 1942 3 49 Baptist (American): Foreign Field Bulletins 1943-1944 3 50,51 Baptist (American): Women's American Baptist Foreign 1929-1945 Mission Society 3 52 Baptist (English): Baptist Missionary Society 1929-1945 3 53 Baptist (Southern): Southern Baptist Convention 1939-1945 3 54 Barber, George G. 1930-1940 3 55 Beeman - 1934 3 55 Berkeley 1938-1943 3 56 Boone Library School 1930-1943 3 57,58 Boston Committee 1937-1941 3 59 Boston University 1937-1944 3 60 British Council - 1944-1945 3 60 Buffalo 1943-1944 3 61 4 Burton - 1935-1945 3 61 Butterfield 1930-1941 3 62 Caldwell, Oliver J. 1939-1945 3 63 Campaign (Emergency) 1937-1940 3 64 Cabot, Godfrey L. 1939-1941 3 65 Carnegie - 1937-1944 3 65 Central 1932-1938 3 65 Carroll, Fred M. 1943-1944 3 66 Chang - 1942-1945 3 66 Chen, L. 1939 3 66 Charters 3 67 Chen, Paul Ching-szu 1940 3 68 Chen, Paul T. H. - 1938 3 68 Chen, S. 1940-1942 3 69 Chen, W. Y. 1942-1944 3 70 Cheng, Mary Mei-yu 1944-1945 4 71,72 Cheng, Te-k'un 1938-1944 4 73,74 Chiang Kai-shek, Madame 1937-1943, n.d. Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges in China, Consolidate [...] Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, Record Group No. 11 - Page 9 Box Folder Reel Description Date(s) 4 75 Chiang, Newton 1944-1945 4 76 Chicago Committee for Aid to China 1931-1941 4 77,78 Chicago Emergency Committee 1937-1938 4 79 Child Welfare Training Program 1943 4 80 China Aid Council 1942-1944 4 81-94 4,5 China Christian Educational Association 1918-1933 5 95-113 5 China Christian Educational Association 1934-1945 5 114, 115 5,6 China Institute in America 1937-1943 5 116, 117 6 China Medical Board 1932-1945 6 118 China Planning Committee 1944 6 119 Chinese Embassy - 1940-1945 6 119 Ching 1944-1945 6 119 Chinese Students' Christian Assoc. in North America 1945 6 120 Christian Character 1933-1944 6 121 Christian Science Monitor - 1943 6 121 Chu, C. 1942-1945 6 122-124 Chu, Yong-cheng 1942-1944 6 125 Church Committee for China Relief 1944 6 126 Church Missionary Society 1928-1944 6 127 Church of England in Canada - 1944-1945 6 127 Clark, G. 1936-1937 6 127 Claremont China Relief Committee 1940-1943 6 128 Clark University 1940-1945 6 129 Cleveland Emergency Committee 1937-1938 6 130 Colby - 1941-1945 6 130 College 1944 6 131-133 Columbia University 1931-1944 6 134 Committee - 1942-1944 6 134 Commonwealth 1943 6 135 Compton - 1941-1943 6 135 Comstock, Sara E. 1944 6 135 Comstock, Ada 1937-1939 6 136 Conference of Missionary Societies in Great Britain and 1930-1945 Ireland 6 137 Converse - 1945 Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges in China, Consolidate [...] Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, Record Group No. 11 - Page 10 Box Folder Reel Description Date(s) 6 137 Cornell 1937 6 137 Cooperating Organizations 1937-1939 6 138-142 Cravath, Paul 1937-1940 6 143-145 Cressey, George 1932-1945 7 146 7 Cross - 1944-1945 7 146 Cushman 1937-1942 7 146 Curtiss, Elizabeth A. 1944 7 147-149 Danforth, William 1937-1945 7 150 Daughters - 1939 7 150 Davidson 1941-1942 7 151-154 Davis, Arthur V. 1937-1944, n.d. 7 155 Davis, John W. 1937-1940 7 156 Davison - 1938-1939 7 156 Day 1945 7 157 Decker, J. W. 1943-1946, n.d. 7 158 Decorations - 1939-1940 7 158 Dinkelacker 1940 7 158 Degrees 1938 7 158 Denison 1936 7 158 Detroit Committee 1937 7 159 Dinners 1935-1940 7 160-163 Disciples of Christ (United Christian Missionary 1930-1942 Society) 7 164 Doren, Alice 1942-1945 7 165 Downie - 1943-1944 7 165 Dyson 1937-1942 7 166 Earhart - 1939-1942 7 166 Earnshaw 1937-1942 7 167 Edmunds, Charles K. 1937-1944 7 168 Education - 1941-1943 7 168 Educational Forum 1937-1938 7 169, 170 Edwards, Dwight 1942-1945 8 171 8 Edwards, E. 1939 8 172-178 Episcopal Church 1923-1945 8 179-181 Evangelical and Reformed Church 1923-1945 Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges in China, Consolidate [...] Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, Record Group No. 11 - Page 11 Box Folder Reel Description Date(s) 8 182 Evangelical and Reformed Church: Women's Guild - 1943-1945 9 182 Evans 1941-1942 8 183 Exchange 1930-1939 8 184 Famine - Fang 1944 8 184 Farley 1944 8 184 Federal Reserve 1943 8 184 Fenn, H. 1943-1944 8 185-195 8,9 Fenn, William P. 1942-1944 Jul 9 196-199 9 Fenn, William P. 1944 Aug-1945 9 200 Ferguson - 1936-1939, n.d. 9 200 Fielder 1933-1934 9 201 Finley, J.B. Estate 1941 9 201 Finley, John H. 1933-1940 9 201 Finley, Mrs. John H. 1937-1945 9 202 Fitch, Mr. and Mrs. George A. 1937-1944 9 203 Flagler, Harry H. 1937-1943 9 204 Fleming, D. J. 1938-1940 9 205 Fletcher School of Diplomacy 1941-1942 9 206 Florida - 1938 9 206 Florida, Univ. of 1941 9 206 Forbes, W.C. 1937 9 206 Fosdick 1937-1938 9 207 Foundations: Baker - Dayton 9 208 Foundations: Dodge - Ford 9 209 Foundations: Grant - Hayden 9 210 Foundations: Hazen - Littauer 9 211 Foundations: Lloyd - Macy 9 212 Foundations: McGregor Foundation 1939-1943 9 213 Foundations: Mellon - 1939, 1943 9 213 Milbank 1943 9 214 Foundations: Mills (Davella) Foundation 1937-1945 9 215 10 Foundations: Osborne - 1943 9 215 Phillips 1943 9 216 Foundations: Rackham Fund 1935-1936 9 217 Foundations: Rosemary - Wieboldt; misc. Series I. Associated Boards for Christian Colleges in China, Consolidate [...] Archives of the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, Record Group No. 11 - Page 12 Box Folder Reel Description Date(s) 9 218 Francis - 1939 9 218 Franklin 1939-1942 9 219 Friend - 1942 9 219 Friends Ambulance Unit 1943-1944 9 219 Friends Service Council 1928-1942 9 220 Fulton, R. Brank 1939-1943 9 221, 222 Fung, George D. 1941-1945 9 223, 224 Fung, Paul F. 1942-1945 9 225 Fung Memorial Loan Fund 1942-1944 10 226 Gale - 1941 10 226 Galt 1942-1943 10 227, 228 Gamble, Sidney 1937-1945 10 229, 230 Gamewell, Frank D. 1932-1945 10 231-234 Garside, B. A. 1931-1945, n.d. 10 235 General Electric - 1941 10 235 Geisbert, Edmund 1945 10 235 Gilbert 1944 10 236 Gilkey, Rev.
Recommended publications
  • Chinese Christians and American Missionaries in the Republic of China (1912-1949)
    Rowan University Rowan Digital Works Theses and Dissertations 10-17-2016 Finding Chinese Jesus: Chinese Christians and American missionaries in the Republic of China (1912-1949) Matthew Joseph Douthitt Rowan University Follow this and additional works at: https://rdw.rowan.edu/etd Part of the Asian History Commons, and the Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Douthitt, Matthew Joseph, "Finding Chinese Jesus: Chinese Christians and American missionaries in the Republic of China (1912-1949)" (2016). Theses and Dissertations. 2335. https://rdw.rowan.edu/etd/2335 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Rowan Digital Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Rowan Digital Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FINDING CHINESE JESUS: CHINESE CHRISTIANS AND AMERICAN MISSIONARIES IN THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA (1912-1949) by Matthew J Douthitt A Thesis Submitted to the Department of History College of Humanities and Social Sciences In partial fulfillment of the requirement For the degree of Master of Arts in History at Rowan University May 16, 2016 Thesis Chair: Q. Edward Wang, Ph.D © 2016 Matthew J Douthitt Dedication I dedicate this thesis to my mom who is always there for me. Acknowledgments Developing this thesis has been quite a learning experience for me. I would like express my deepest thanks to the entire History Department at Rowan University for their warm reception upon my arrival and their constant encouragement throughout my studies. Specifically, I would like to thank Dr. Joy Wiltenburg and Dr. Scott Morschauser for being a part of the thesis committee and offering their advice.
    [Show full text]
  • The Student Interracial Ministry, Liberal Protestantism, and the Civil Rights Movement, 1960-1970
    Revolution and Reconciliation: The Student Interracial Ministry, Liberal Protestantism, and the Civil Rights Movement, 1960-1970 David P. Cline A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a degree of doctor of philosophy in the Department of History. Chapel Hill 2010 Approved by: Advisor: Jacquelyn Dowd Hall Reader: W. Fitzhugh Brundage Reader: William H. Chafe Reader: Laurie F. Maffly-Kipp Reader: Heather A. Williams © 2010 David P. Cline ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT DAVID P. CLINE: Revolution and Reconciliation: The Student Interracial Ministry, Liberal Protestantism, and the Civil Rights Movement, 1960-1970 (Under the direction of Jacquelyn Dowd Hall) The Student Interracial Ministry (SIM) was a seminary-based, nationally influential Protestant civil rights organization based in the Social Gospel and Student Christian Movement traditions. This dissertation uses SIM’s history to explore the role of liberal Protestants in the popular revolutions of the 1960s. Entirely student-led and always ecumenical in scope, SIM began in 1960 with the tactic of placing black assistant pastors in white churches and whites in black churches with the goal of achieving racial reconciliation. In its later years, before it disbanded in mid-1968, SIM moved away from church structures, engaging directly in political and economic movements, inner-city ministry and development projects, and college and seminary teaching. In each of these areas, SIM participants attempted to live out German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer's exhortation to “bring the church into the world.” Revolution and Reconciliation demonstrates that the civil rights movement, in both its “classic” phase from the mid-1950s to the mid-1960s and its longer phase stretching over most of the twentieth century, was imbued with religious faith and its expression.
    [Show full text]
  • Protestants in China
    Background Paper Protestants in China Issue date: 21 March 2013 (update) Review date: 21 September 2013 CONTENTS 1. Overview ................................................................................................................................... 2 2. History ....................................................................................................................................... 2 3. Number of Adherents ................................................................................................................ 3 4. Official Government Policy on Religion .................................................................................. 4 5. Three Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM) and the China Christian Council (CCC) ................... 5 6. Registered Churches .................................................................................................................. 6 7. Unregistered Churches/ Unregistered Protestant Groups .......................................................... 7 8. House Churches ......................................................................................................................... 8 9. Protestant Denominations in China ........................................................................................... 9 10. Protestant Beliefs and Practices ............................................................................................ 10 11. Cults, sects and heterodox Protestant groups ........................................................................ 14
    [Show full text]
  • © 2013 Yi-Ling Lin
    © 2013 Yi-ling Lin CULTURAL ENGAGEMENT IN MISSIONARY CHINA: AMERICAN MISSIONARY NOVELS 1880-1930 BY YI-LING LIN DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Comparative Literature in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2013 Urbana, Illinois Doctoral committee: Professor Waïl S. Hassan, Chair Professor Emeritus Leon Chai, Director of Research Professor Emeritus Michael Palencia-Roth Associate Professor Robert Tierney Associate Professor Gar y G. Xu Associate Professor Rania Huntington, University of Wisconsin at Madison Abstract From a comparative standpoint, the American Protestant missionary enterprise in China was built on a paradox in cross-cultural encounters. In order to convert the Chinese—whose religion they rejected—American missionaries adopted strategies of assimilation (e.g. learning Chinese and associating with the Chinese) to facilitate their work. My dissertation explores how American Protestant missionaries negotiated the rejection-assimilation paradox involved in their missionary work and forged a cultural identification with China in their English novels set in China between the late Qing and 1930. I argue that the missionaries’ novelistic expression of that identification was influenced by many factors: their targeted audience, their motives, their work, and their perceptions of the missionary enterprise, cultural difference, and their own missionary identity. Hence, missionary novels may not necessarily be about conversion, the missionaries’ primary objective but one that suggests their resistance to Chinese culture, or at least its religion. Instead, the missionary novels I study culminate in a non-conversion theme that problematizes the possibility of cultural assimilation and identification over ineradicable racial and cultural differences.
    [Show full text]
  • ST/LIFE/PAGE<LIF-005>
    | FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2020 | THE STRAITS TIMES | happenings life C5 Boon Chan Assistant Life Editor recommends Picks POP SOUNDS OF MY LIFE William Wei Music Cat owners will be able to identify with the cute track Cat Republic, which has lyrics like “Poop and pee for you, snacks and toys for you/I’m ignoring you now, unless you open up a can” and “You will serve me forever/You will love me forever”. Other slice-of-life songs abound on Taiwanese singer-songwriter William Wei’s mostly Mandarin fifth album. POP From the chirpy English track See You On Monday and HUG IN OUR HEARTS the breezy I Wrote A Song For You (about the pleasure and Billkin featuring Jaylerr meaning of music) to the more contemplative At Thirty (“I chase after time, only to realise/Time is chasing me”) Thai actor-singer Billkin’s new Thai and Best Meal In The World (“If I could eat away my single, Hug In Our Hearts, starts off as sadness, digest what I miss”), there is plenty here to relate a forlorn ballad as he sings quietly to and be engaged by. about missing someone (“Open the The musician, who also goes by WeiBird, has dedicated door for loneliness/Since we haven’t the album to his late grandmother and in the track seen each other”). labelled Credits, one can hear her and his family sweetly It builds to a catchy chorus before cheering him on. fellow actor-singer Jaylerr jumps in The album can be a little sprawling and unwieldy at with a sunny rap, which brightens the times, but then again, so is life.
    [Show full text]
  • Chinese Protestant Christianity Today Daniel H. Bays
    Chinese Protestant Christianity Today Daniel H. Bays ABSTRACT Protestant Christianity has been a prominent part of the general religious resurgence in China in the past two decades. In many ways it is the most striking example of that resurgence. Along with Roman Catholics, as of the 1950s Chinese Protestants carried the heavy historical liability of association with Western domi- nation or imperialism in China, yet they have not only overcome that inheritance but have achieved remarkable growth. Popular media and human rights organizations in the West, as well as various Christian groups, publish a wide variety of information and commentary on Chinese Protestants. This article first traces the gradual extension of interest in Chinese Protestants from Christian circles to the scholarly world during the last two decades, and then discusses salient characteristics of the Protestant movement today. These include its size and rate of growth, the role of Church–state relations, the continuing foreign legacy in some parts of the Church, the strong flavour of popular religion which suffuses Protestantism today, the discourse of Chinese intellectuals on Christianity, and Protestantism in the context of the rapid economic changes occurring in China, concluding with a perspective from world Christianity. Protestant Christianity has been a prominent part of the general religious resurgence in China in the past two decades. Today, on any given Sunday there are almost certainly more Protestants in church in China than in all of Europe.1 One recent thoughtful scholarly assessment characterizes Protestantism as “flourishing” though also “fractured” (organizationally) and “fragile” (due to limits on the social and cultural role of the Church).2 And popular media and human rights organizations in the West, as well as various Christian groups, publish a wide variety of information and commentary on Chinese Protestants.
    [Show full text]
  • Taiwanese Eyes on the Modern: Cold War Dance Diplomacy And
    Taiwanese Eyes on the Modern: Cold War Dance Diplomacy and American Modern Dances in Taiwan, 1950–1980 Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Tsung-Hsin Lee, M.A. Graduate Program in Dance Studies The Ohio State University 2020 Dissertation Committee Hannah Kosstrin, Advisor Harmony Bench Danielle Fosler-Lussier Morgan Liu Copyrighted by Tsung-Hsin Lee 2020 2 Abstract This dissertation “Taiwanese Eyes on the Modern: Cold War Dance Diplomacy and American Modern Dances in Taiwan, 1950–1980” examines the transnational history of American modern dance between the United States and Taiwan during the Cold War era. From the 1950s to the 1980s, the Carmen De Lavallade-Alvin Ailey, José Limón, Paul Taylor, Martha Graham, and Alwin Nikolais dance companies toured to Taiwan under the auspices of the U.S. State Department. At the same time, Chinese American choreographers Al Chungliang Huang and Yen Lu Wong also visited Taiwan, teaching and presenting American modern dance. These visits served as diplomatic gestures between the members of the so-called Free World led by the U.S. Taiwanese audiences perceived American dance modernity through mixed interpretations under the Cold War rhetoric of freedom that the U.S. sold and disseminated through dance diplomacy. I explore the heterogeneous shaping forces from multiple engaging individuals and institutions that assemble this diplomatic history of dance, resulting in outcomes influencing dance histories of the U.S. and Taiwan for different ends. I argue that Taiwanese audiences interpreted American dance modernity as a means of embodiment to advocate for freedom and social change.
    [Show full text]
  • The Presbyterian Church in Taiwan and the Advocacy of Local Autonomy
    SINO-PLATONIC PAPERS Number 92 January, 1999 The Presbyterian Church in Taiwan and the Advocacy of Local Autonomy by Christine Louise Lin Victor H. Mair, Editor Sino-Platonic Papers Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305 USA [email protected] www.sino-platonic.org SINO-PLATONIC PAPERS is an occasional series edited by Victor H. Mair. The purpose of the series is to make available to specialists and the interested public the results of research that, because of its unconventional or controversial nature, might otherwise go unpublished. The editor actively encourages younger, not yet well established, scholars and independent authors to submit manuscripts for consideration. Contributions in any of the major scholarly languages of the world, including Romanized Modern Standard Mandarin (MSM) and Japanese, are acceptable. In special circumstances, papers written in one of the Sinitic topolects (fangyan) may be considered for publication. Although the chief focus of Sino-Platonic Papers is on the intercultural relations of China with other peoples, challenging and creative studies on a wide variety of philological subjects will be entertained. This series is not the place for safe, sober, and stodgy presentations. Sino-Platonic Papers prefers lively work that, while taking reasonable risks to advance the field, capitalizes on brilliant new insights into the development of civilization. The only style-sheet we honor is that of consistency. Where possible, we prefer the usages of the Journal of Asian Studies. Sinographs (hanzi, also called tetragraphs [fangkuaizi]) and other unusual symbols should be kept to an absolute minimum. Sino-Platonic Papers emphasizes substance over form.
    [Show full text]
  • Responses to Information Requests
    RIR Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada www.irb-cisr.gc.ca Français Home Contact Us Help Search canada.gc.ca Home > Research > Responses to Information Requests RESPONSES TO INFORMATION REQUESTS (RIRs) New Search | About RIR's | Help 07 September 2005 CHN100387.E China: Situation of Protestants and treatment by authorities, particularly in Fujian and Guangdong (2001-2005) Research Directorate, Immigration and Refugee Board, Ottawa General Information Estimates of the number of Protestants in China vary among sources consulted by the Research Directorate. The Chinese government claims that there are more than 15 million adherents of the official Protestant Three-Self Patriotic Movement, although Protestant church officials put the number of worshippers who attend registered churches at 20 million (International Religious Freedom Report 2004 15 Sept. 2004). Estimates of the number of Protestants who belong to "unregistered" church groups range from 30 million to 50 million (Christian Science Monitor 8 Mar. 2004; U.S. News & World Report 30 Apr. 2001; see also International Religious Freedom Report 2004 15 Sept. 2004, Sec. 1). Some academics place the total number of Protestants in China at 90 million (ibid.). Sources agree that the number of Protestants is growing (ibid.; Christian Science Monitor 24 Dec. 2003; Economist 21 Apr. 2005), particularly among urban intellectuals, business people and university students (ibid.; Washington Post 24 Dec. 2002). Henan, the "Bethlehem" of China (Christian Science Monitor 8 Mar. 2004), reportedly has the largest number of Christians among all the provinces of China, with about five million worshippers, most of whom attend "house" churches (SCMP 9 Jan. 2002; see also U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Job Evaluation Model of Major Public Hospitals in China
    Job Evaluation Model of Major Public Hospitals in China SHU Xing Thesis submitted as partial requirement for the conferral of the degree of Doctor of Management Supervisor: Prof. Aristides Ferreira, Assistant Professor, ISCTE University Institute of Lisbon March, 2019 – Spine– SHU Xing SHU Job Evaluation Model of inJob Evaluation Public Hospitals Major China Job Evaluation Model of Major Public Hospitals in China SHU Xing Thesis submitted as partial requirement for the conferral of the degree of Doctor of Management Supervisor: Prof. Aristides Ferreira, Assistant Professor, ISCTE University Institute of Lisbon March, 2019 [This page is deliberately left blank.] [This page is deliberately left blank.] Abstract The current economic climate has contributed to an increasingly competitive environment among organizations. In order to ensure competitive advantage, they must be able to promote high levels of professional performance. This research is part of this theme and aims to analyze how the job characteristics, professional knowledge, skills, competencies, training and work engagement influence the job evaluation and, consequently, the performance of employees of six public hospitals, China. The sample consists of 546 subjects aged between 21 and 58 years (M = 37.9; SD = 8.73), with the majority being females (55.5%). For the collection of data, such scales were used as the Job Diagnostic Survey (JDS), the Knowledge, Skills, Abilities, and Other Personal Characteristics Scale (KSAOS), the Competencies and Training Scale (CTS) and the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale (UWES). The results obtained show that the job characteristics, the professional knowledge, the skills, the training and the work engagement influence the job evaluation. It was also found that the male respondents, those belonging to the older age group, those with higher academic qualifications and those with higher positions present higher average performance in all dimensions under study.
    [Show full text]
  • Building the Protestant Church in Shandong, China Norman H
    Union is based on the following: 377 of the 691 groups in the 1993 ary Coordinating Council to All Western Missionary Organizations Directory work there, plus 148 (or approximately half of the 296 Interested in Spreading the Gospel in the Former Soviet Union:' groupsidentified since 1993), plus36SouthKorean groups (9church March 23, 1993, RM. and 27 parachurch), 12. Mark Elliott, "The Protestant Missionary Presence in the Former 3. Grigori Komendant, "Certainly: ' East-West Church and Ministry Soviet Union:' Religion, State,and Society 25, no. 4 (forthcoming). Report 4, no . I (Winter 1996): 2. 13. Anatoli Pchelintsev, interview by Anita Deyneka, July 1993, RM. 4. AlexanderSorokin."A RussianPerspectiveon the MissionaryMove­ 14. PaulSemenchuk, "WesternChristians Working in the CIS:Are They ment," East-West Church and Ministry Report 4, no. 1 (Winter 1996): in Tune with Russian Evangelical Nationals?" (paper prepared for 16. Trans World Radio, November 1994), p. 4. 5. E-mail from Brother Seraphim, December 1, 1996, Russian Minis­ 15. Grigori Komedant, interview by Peter Deyneka, October 1996, RM. tries files, Wheaton, Illinoi s (hereafter RM). 16. Semenchuk, "Western Christians Working in the CIS:' p. 2. 6. Michael Bourdeaux, ed., The Politics of Religion in Russiaand the New 17. Manfred Kohl, "Filling the Leadership Void in the Post Communist States of Euroasia (London: M. E. Sharpe, 1995), p. 117. Church," Contact 23, no. 1 (Spring 1994): 4-5. 7. Quoted in Miroslav Volf, "Fishing in the Neighbor's Pond: Mission 18. Anita Deyneka, "Freedom for All," Frontier, September-october and Proselytism in Eastern Europe:' International BulletinofMission­ 1996, p. 11. ary Research 20, no.
    [Show full text]
  • BUY~ Am.WA~Itt O
    - - - - -- BUY~ am.WA~Itt o - C:ON~UM~~sr ~E.S~A~Cr-t ~ -- - C:ONSUM-Ft ~MO~ME.NT~ 1926 -1~ao~~-~~;~ --~ -:: --'7 ~ - ~- ~ - ,.- ·: _- - :;;;: -: ~ = ==- -- --= ~-~ --= = ~--= ::=:: ~ -- = ~ :- ~==-= - ..: :..:=- ~--= ~~ -=-~ =:---: :: .;;.~~- -= -~ ~::-:;;;: -- ~ ~:~: ~- ~ :==._---: = ---::... - ~- - ::::::. _., - - America's PIONEER ~=­ O_rgQ.n~izt~tion ~ ---- - TESTING ~- ·-::-::-~ - - -~~ ~~ -~ ' - -: - - - - for COt+S-UME.RS :i ~~~ - .= -~- =- ~-====- - -:. ~-~~""7 _E ~~ =--~ _;_-- _---:-~-_ -- --- ;;-.- - - ,.,. ::-.;:: ~.=.;;.:;,·==- - ::~- ~- ~ ~ ~==~§: -- -- ~-= - :;;--- ~::-: - :;;. ...:-:::::: ~~~~--:: ~ =;_ __ --- - -- - - Gallery 'SOCand Special Collections and University Archiv~s- }3aUerx ~- ~ __ - ~ _ _ _ -~- ~ ~--~= -: Archibald Stev_~I1S ~le~a~nder Libr~ry -__ _ January 26 to=April 15f 1995 - BUYE.~ BE.WA~E:.! C:O~SUME.~Sr ~E.SE.A~C:ti AND Tf1Er. C:ONSUM~t~ MO~MitNT~ 1926 -1980 Gallery '50 and Special Collections and University Archives Archibald Stevens Alexander Library Curator: Gregory L. Williams CONTENTS EXHffiiTION TEXT . 1 CONSUMERS' RESEARCH COLLECfiON SUMMARY ................. 10 CONSUMERS' RESEARCH HISTORY .............................. 11 BUYER BEWARE: CONSUMERS' RESEARCH AND THE CONSUMER MOVEMENT, 1926-1980 INTRODUCTION Consumer testing and rating magazines are taken for granted at the end of the 20th century. Many of these product testing or rating publications have similar names, test the same products, and look alike. Before 1927 there were no guides or booklets for consumers to turn to for non-commercial
    [Show full text]