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Entries Tagged as 'Civil Rights'

Chinese dissident denied entry to homeland again

May 15th, 2009 · No Comments

click here to see the article on Boston Globe.html
Thursday, May 12, 2009 8:57 AM
By David Abel, Globe Staff
For the second time in less than a year, Chinese dissident and Harvard fellow Yang Jianli was refused entry into his native country.
His latest effort to enter Hong Kong was stymied Saturday night, he said in a telephone [...]

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Tags: Activities of Dr. Yang Jianli · Civil Rights · Human Rights · News from other media

As more Chinese lose jobs, protests grow bolder

January 13th, 2009 · No Comments

Color China Photo via AP File
Factory workers occupy an office after smashing equipment at the Kaida toy factory over a labor dispute in Dongguan, east China’s Guangdong province, on Nov. 24, 2008.
By Ariana Eunjung Cha
updated 2:43 a.m. ET, Tues., Jan. 13, 2009
BEIJING - For months, the Communist Party had been able to deflect anger about factory [...]

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Tags: Civil Rights

Leading Chinese dissident, Liu Xiaobo, arrested over freedom charter

December 9th, 2008 · No Comments

From Times Online
December 9, 2008
Jane Macartney, Beijing
A leading dissident who organised hundreds of Chinese thinkers, academics and writers to sign a charter calling for dramatic democratic and legal reforms was under arrest today.
Liu Xiaobo, a literary critic first jailed for his role in the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations, was taken from his Beijing home late [...]

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Tags: Civil Rights

Introduction to the Founder

Dr. Yang Jianli

Founder and President of Initiatives for China, Dr. Yang Jianli was born in Shandong Province in northern China. A graduate of Beijing Normal University, Dr. Yang holds a PhD. in Mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley, and a PhD in Political Economy from the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government. In 1989, at the age of 26, his fellow graduate students at Berkeley selected him to go to Beijing in support of their counterparts in China who were demonstrating for democracy in Tiananmen Square. He arrived in Tiananmen Square in time to witness the massacre of thousands of peaceful demonstrators by the guns and tanks of the Chinese government. This event fundamentally changed young Jianli's future. He narrowly escaped capture and returned to the United States where he committed himself to studying democracy. Read more...