The Congressional-Executive Commission on China was created by Congress in October 2000 with the legislative mandate to monitor human rights and the development of the rule of law in China, and to submit an annual report to the President and the Congress. The Commission consists of nine Senators, nine Members of the House of Representatives, and five senior Administration officials appointed by the President.
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Announcements |
Statement of CECC Chairman Christopher Smith and Cochairman Sherrod Brown on the Trial and Sentencing of Chen Kegui
Today we are deeply dismayed to learn that authorities have sentenced Chen Kegui, nephew of renowned legal advocate Chen Guangcheng, to more than three years in prison, in a trial marred from beginning to end by glaring procedural violations. Authorities' treatment of this case raises serious questions about the rule of law in China.
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Statement of CECC Chairman Christopher Smith and Cochairman Sherrod Brown on the Release of the 2012 Annual Report
Washington, DC—The bipartisan Congressional-Executive Commission on China today released its 2012 Annual Report on developments in human rights and rule of law in China.
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Statement of CECC Chairman Christopher Smith and Cochairman Sherrod Brown on the 23rd Anniversary of the Tiananmen Crackdown
This week marks the passing of another year since the Chinese government's brutal crackdown on innocent civilians who demonstrated in Tiananmen Square and across China for democracy and an end to corruption. Powerful reminders of that avoidable tragedy are everywhere in China.
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Statement of CECC Chairman Christopher Smith and Cochairman Sherrod Brown on the Arrival of Chen Guangcheng in the United States
Today we are relieved to learn that Chen Guangcheng, his wife, and two children have arrived safely in the United States. Mr. Chen endured more than four years in prison in China, after which he and his family suffered for more than a year and a half under brutal conditions of illegal home confinement.
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CECC Releases Chinese Translation of 2011 Annual Report Executive Summary
A Chinese translation of the Executive Summary of the 2011 Annual Report of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China is now available. The executive summary includes major trends such as disregard for and misapplication of the law, and increased Communist Party control over society, as well as potential areas for progress.
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Statement of CECC Chairman Christopher Smith and Cochairman Sherrod Brown on Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping's Visit to the United States
The chairmen of the bipartisan Congressional-Executive Commission on China today called on Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping to take concrete steps to improve human rights and the rule of law in China.
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More Analysis... Commission Analysis |
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Authorities Sentence Chen Kegui in Trial Marred by Procedural Violations
On November 30, 2012, the Yinan County People's Court in Linyi city, Shandong province, tried and sentenced Chen Kegui, nephew of prominent legal advocate Chen Guangcheng, to three years and three months in prison for "intentional injury." Chen Kegui wielded knives against local officials in April 2012 when they broke into his home after discovering Chen Guangcheng had escaped from illegal home confinement. According to supporters, Chen Kegui's case has been marred by procedural violations since authorities detained him in May.
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Democracy Advocate Cao Haibo Sentenced to Eight Years for Subversion
Chinese authorities sentenced democracy advocate Cao Haibo to eight years' imprisonment on the charge of "subversion of state power" for creating online discussion groups and sending text messages relating to democratic reforms and the philosophies of Sun Yat-sen, founder of the Nationalist Party (Kuomintang). Cao's trial was marred by procedural issues, and his sentence disregards international norms and PRC Constitutional principles. His verdict also demonstrates the continuing trend of harsh sentences for democracy advocates.
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Communist Party Holds Significant Party Congress In November, Selects Top Leaders
The Chinese Communist Party 18th Party Congress, which meets every five years, will open on November 8, 2012. The Congress is significant for several reasons. At the Congress, the Party chooses the Party's top leadership. China's political system is authoritarian based on one-party rule, so Party leaders become leaders of the country. Despite official claims that "elected" delegates to the Party Congress choose members of two top Party leadership bodies, China's leaders in practice are chosen by a select number of incumbent top Party officials through a non-transparent and largely undemocratic process which is contrary to international human rights standards. The Party also will issue a "political report" at the Congress that reportedly strives to "establish ideological guidelines and the political resolutions of the collective leadership." Typically, there has been some limited input by non-Party members during the drafting stages of the report, but debates over ideology and policy direction have been non-transparent. In addition, the Congress will likely amend the Communist Party's constitution.
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State Monopoly of Environmental Quality Monitoring and Reporting: State Secrets and Environmental Protection
Chinese authorities appear posed to strengthen barriers, through revisions to monitoring regulations, to non-governmental efforts to independently monitor and report on environmental quality. This development along with the June 2012 official public rebuke of U.S. officials for U.S. monitoring and reporting of PM2.5 air pollutants highlight official control over environmental quality information and suggest that such information is sensitive. Chinese authorities have cited the need for quality control over monitoring data; officials, however, also consider some environmental data as "secret."
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NGOs Report Harsh Conditions at Chinese Factories Making Popular Electronics
In recent months, several worker rights NGOs have issued reports documenting poor working conditions at factories in China producing electronic products for well-known brands such as Apple, HP, Nokia, Dell, AT&T;, and Motorola. The reports underscore Chinese workers' inability to form independent unions to advocate for their rights and lack of enforcement of Chinese labor laws.
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Authorities Suppress Calls for an Official Accounting in Lead-Up to 23rd Anniversary of Crackdown on 1989 Protests
In the lead-up to the 23rd anniversary of Chinese authorities' violent suppression on June 3-4, 1989, of protests in Beijing and other cities in China, Chinese citizens continued to call for an official accounting of those events and for a re-evaluation of the "verdict" of the protests as a "counterrevolutionary riot." Authorities responded by restricting the movements of people attempting to hold memorial events. Officials also continued to censor references to June 4 on the Internet. In recent months, Chinese officials have also continued to impose harsh sentences on citizens who have peacefully advocated for democracy.
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Relatives and Supporters of Chen Guangcheng Harassed, Beaten, Detained
Following his escape from illegal home confinement on April 22, 2012, legal advocate Chen Guangcheng sought safety in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing for six days while U.S. and Chinese officials negotiated a deal for his and his family's freedom. Chen left the U.S. embassy under U.S. official escort on May 2 to receive medical treatment at a nearby hospital for injuries sustained during his escape as well as for an ongoing gastrointestinal illness.
During his confinement at the hospital, Chen reported that he would like to travel to the United States with his family to rest (Washington Post, 3 May 12), and he later reported that Chinese officials are assisting in his plans to do so (NYT, 8 May 12). As he waits for a passport and other paperwork needed to leave the country and pursue a fellowship offered to him by the New York University School of Law, Chen has repeatedly raised concerns about official retaliation against his relatives in Shandong province.
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Chinese Authorities Implement Real Name Microblog Regulations
Beginning March 16, authorities in Beijing and Guangdong province reportedly began enforcing a requirement that microblog users must register their accounts with their accounts with their real name and identity information before being allowed to post or re-post content online. The announcement that authorities would begin enforcing this requirement follows the December 2011 issuance of regulations introducing this registration requirement in several cities in China, including Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, and the Guangdong cities of Guangzhou and Shenzhen. Given that Beijing and Guangdong are home to a number of China's major microblogging service providers, the real name registration requirement could affect large numbers of microblog users in China. Authorities have expressed concern over "online rumors," and the recent measures follow a spate of high-profile incidents in recent years in which large numbers of Chinese microbloggers took to their blogs to openly criticize the government.
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Chinese Authorities Issue Regulations To Control Journalists and "Unverified Reports"
In mid-October 2011, the Chinese government released regulations that aim to control journalists' use of "unverified information" and to regulate news agencies' review procedures. The regulations prohibit Chinese journalists from directly including "unverified information" obtained from the Internet or mobile text messages in their reporting. In addition, the regulations require that news agencies improve the system of accountability for "fake" or "false" news reports, terms that are not defined in the regulations. The October 2011 announcement followed official calls to restrict news reporting and to limit so-called "rumors" in the media.
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Chinese Human Rights Defender Chen Guangcheng Escapes Illegal Home Confinement
On April 27, 2012, international human rights organizations and news agencies reported that human rights defender Chen Guangcheng escaped from his home outside of Linyi city, Shandong province, on or around April 22, after being subjected to extralegal home confinement (ruanjin) for nineteen months. Chen reportedly received assistance from others who brought him to a "secret location" in Beijing. BBC and New York Times, citing human rights advocate Hu Jia and Chinese state security sources, have suggested that Chen may currently be in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, but those reports could not be confirmed.
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Workers Demonstrate in Various Industries and Locations in Late 2011 and Early 2012
From late fall 2011 through early 2012, Chinese and international media outlets reported on a series of strikes and demonstrations in at least 10 provincial-level areas in China that some international news sources and labor rights advocates characterized as the most significant series of worker actions since the summer of 2010. While the exact number of worker actions that occurred during this period is difficult to determine, they involved a variety of industries, and recent statements from the Chinese government reflected concern over social strife as a result of labor disputes. In some cases, workers demonstrated in response to cost-cutting measures that managers took, reportedly designed to pass the costs of slowed macroeconomic activity on to workers. In some of those cases, workers said their motivations for demonstrating included the failure of management to consult with them in the implementation of cost-cutting measures. In other cases, workers reportedly demonstrated in response to wider systemic abuses and other labor-related grievances, such as excessive overtime demands and abusive management practices. Management and local officials in some cases reportedly used force against or detained demonstrating workers while seeking to put a stop to these disputes.
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Chinese Authorities Reportedly Repatriate North Korean Refugees
In early March 2012, South Korean news outlets and CNN reported claims that Chinese authorities had repatriated approximately 30 North Korean refugees who were detained in northeast China. The reported repatriations occurred during the 100-day mourning period for the late Kim Jong-il, a time during which his son and new leader of North Korea vowed to "exterminate three generations" of any family with a member caught defecting. The fate of those repatriated or their family members is not known. China's policy of considering all North Korean refugees economic migrants violates international law to which China itself is subject and which prohibits China from returning refugees who face the risk of political persecution. The case of the North Korean refugees prompted international concern over China's repatriation policy, including from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
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China Revises Foreign Investment Guidance Catalogue
On December 24, 2011, Chinese authorities released the revised foreign investment guidance catalogue, which came into effect on January 30, 2012, repealing the 2007 catalogue. The revisions implement the changing priorities of the Chinese government and the Chinese Communist Party in developing the Chinese economy, and directing foreign investment in China toward certain industries to meet these priorities. The revision of the catalogue, however, does not lessen the role of the Chinese government in the economy, or do anything to combat the lack of transparency in the foreign investment approval process that all foreign investment in China must undergo.
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Amended Occupational Disease Law Seeks To Improve Protections for Workers as Occupational Health Continues To Face Risks
On December 31, 2011, the National People's Congress Standing Committee passed an amendment to the PRC Law on Prevention and Control of Occupational Diseases, effective the same day. The amended law contains provisions that could improve worker rights by making it easier for workers to obtain the certification they need in order to receive compensation for work-related diseases. It also requires the government and employers to take general measures to protect the health of workers, including dedicating sufficient funding to the prevention and control of occupational diseases. According to recent reports from Chinese and international media organizations, factors that continue to pose risks to workers' health include inadequate government supervision, illegal actions by employers, a lack of transparency in diagnosing and certifying diseases, and a lack of knowledge among workers about health in the workplace. In addition, officially reported cases of occupational disease have grown at increasing rates in recent years, especially in the mining sector.
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Zhu Yufu Case: Application of Inciting Subversion Provisions Fell Short of International Standards
In February 2012, a Chinese court sentenced long-time democracy activist Zhu Yufu to seven years in prison on the charge of "inciting subversion of state power." The court's judgment claimed that his writings and activities "harmed national security" and that in early 2011, amid Internet calls for "Jasmine" protest rallies in China, Zhu sent a poem and information to a number of people via the Internet "inciting" them to commit subversion. The court's judgment, however, did not explain how Zhu "harmed national security" or indicate the potential or real subversive effect of his words. Chinese criminal provisions regarding inciting subversion are vague, and, as in Zhu's case, their application falls short of international standards because officials have used them to punish peaceful political expression and activity.
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Officials Review Second Draft of Mental Health Law, Final Draft Expected in 2012
China's first national mental health law continues to move through the final stages of consideration, and unofficial sources indicate that the law may be finalized in 2012. In June 2011, a new draft was released for public comment, and in October 2011, the National People's Congress Standing Committee reviewed a revised draft of the proposed legislation. The October draft retains language from the June draft, but also contains some revisions that, if faithfully implemented, could further constrain officials from abusing psychiatric detention to stifle or punish dissent. Despite these potential improvements, however, the October draft continues to raise concerns regarding the law's compliance with international standards to which China has committed. Specific concerns include the draft's failure to make independent reviews of an initial diagnosis mandatory, lack of provision for the appointment of legal counsel, and lack of safeguards that would place time limits on involuntary commitment.
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Environmental Protection Law Draft Revisions: Authorities Remove Language Regarding Strengthening Public Participation, Accountability, and Transparency
Chinese lawmakers are discussing draft revisions to the 1989 PRC Environmental Protection Law but do not appear poised to conclude the first reading prior to the end of the current legislative calendar in March 2011. Lawmakers already eliminated language from the draft revisions that expressed stronger official support for public participation, and improved incentives for governmental accountability and enforcement in the environment sector. Removing the language may have implications for developing the rule of law and democratic participation in the sector, and for channeling public demand for a cleaner environment in a manner that prevents protests. Top leaders limited the scope of revisions, and while environmental authorities later incorporated recommendations from experts and central and local officials before submitting the proposed draft revisions to the National People's Congress Standing Committee for review, the role of the non-governmental sector has been less clear.
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The U.S. and China Hold the 22nd Meeting of the JCCT in Chengdu, China, on November 20 to 21, 2011
On November 20 to 21, 2011, the United States and China held the 22nd meeting of the Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade (JCCT). The meeting addressed areas of concern in the development of rule of law in China, including China's failure to protect intellectual property rights (as required under China's WTO commitments), market access on a level playing field in strategic emerging industries such as new energy vehicles, and innovation. However, the JCCT's achievements were reportedly modest.
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Enterprise Labor Dispute Provisions Emphasize "Harmony" and "Stability," Do Not Address Fundamental Worker Rights Issues
On December 1, 2011, China's Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security issued the Provisions on Consultation and Mediation for Enterprise Labor Disputes, effective January 1, 2012. The Provisions impose a new requirement on all medium and large enterprises to establish committees responsible for mediating disputes in the workplace, and the Provisions stipulate some additional, limited protections for worker rights. The Provisions, however, fail to address the fact that workers in China are not guaranteed the right to organize into independent unions, leaving the government, Communist Party, and employers with greater bargaining power in the process of dispute resolution. Workers continued to organize public demonstrations in late 2011 and early 2012 to advocate for their demands in labor disputes, and in some of those cases, officials tasked with maintaining "harmony" and "stability" used force against or detained workers while trying to stop such demonstrations. In addition, recent statements and reports from high-level officials, as well as local governments and Party organizations, indicate a continued emphasis on prioritizing "harmony" and "stability" in dealing with labor disputes.
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Beijing Cracks Down On Private Security Companies Used To Detain Petitioners
According to Global Times, a publication that operates under the official People's Daily, Beijing municipal Public Security Bureaus launched an official six-month "crack down" on illegal detentions of petitioners by private security companies. The crackdown comes after Chinese news media exposed instances of abuse by "stability maintenance organizations" under contract by local governments to prevent petitioners from airing their grievances to the central government. While authorities have cast the "crack down" as a serious attempt to restrict the use of private "stability maintenance organizations," the implications and effectiveness of the crackdown remain unclear.
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Status of Uyghur Children in Detention Unknown Following Border Clash
Five Uyghur children from a county in Hoten, Xinjiang, are in detention, following a December 2011 clash between a group of Uyghurs and security officials. Local sources say the children were part of a group attempting to leave China due to religious persecution, while official Chinese sources describe the group as terrorists traveling to Pakistan for training. According to multiple accounts, a public security officer was stabbed to death after officials confronted the group, and security forces then opened fire. Official sources report four people in the group were killed and four wounded and taken into detention. Local sources say those in detention are five children, at least four of whom range in age from 7 to 17, and that information on their status and health conditions is not known. Security in the area reportedly remains tight as authorities have attempted to restrict the flow of information about the events and detained family members and others in the aftermath of the clash. The news follows other recent incidents that Chinese authorities have described as terrorist attacks, while other sources have reported facts that differ from the official accounts.
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Gansu and Shandong Provinces Issue New Regulations on Religion
Since China's national Regulation on Religious Affairs entered into force in 2005, a number of provincial governments have followed suit with new or amended local regulations on religion. In some respects, new regulations from Shandong and Gansu provide more clarity, legal protections, and consistency than the older regulations they replace, but all within the restrictive framework of China's controls over religious practice. Such framework offers some limited protections but falls far short of international standards for religious freedom. The regulations also codify more extensive controls over religious practice in some regards, and many legal protections are limited to groups and venues registered with the government. The regulations differ from each other in some respects, reflecting a trend in variation among provincial regulations, even as local regulations on religion move toward greater uniformity with the national regulation.
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Authorities Try Human Rights Activist Ni Yulan, Verdict Pending
Authorities tried human rights lawyer Ni Yulan and her husband Dong Jiqin on December 29, 2011, on charges of "picking quarrels" and "fraud." The court reportedly is considering the defense's request for access to new evidence. If convicted, Ni could face a lengthy sentence and the possibility of life imprisonment. Since 2002, authorities have repeatedly subjected Ni to intense harassment, including physically crippling her, revoking her license to practice law, and detaining and imprisoning her.
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Authorities Sentence Chen Wei to 9 Years for Posting Pro-Democracy Essays
The Suining Municipal Intermediate People's Court in Sichuan province sentenced democracy activist Chen Wei on December 23, 2011, to nine years in prison for "inciting subversion of state power," in a case reportedly marred by procedural irregularities. The prosecutor's indictment alleged that four essays Chen authored were intended to incite subversion. The essays had been posted on overseas Web sites and had discussed democratic reform and human rights in China.
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Authorities Loosen Some Restrictions on Chen Guangcheng and Family, Continue To
Hold Them Under Tight Control
In recent weeks, local authorities in Linyi county, Shandong province, reportedly have loosened some measures used to control rights defender Chen Guangcheng, whom they have held with his wife, daughter, and mother in extralegal detention in their home since September 2010. While in detention, the family has been subjected to beatings, round-the-clock surveillance, and other forms of harassment. Despite reported relaxation of certain controls on Chen and his family, authorities continue to hold them under strict control and continue to block access to individuals who attempt to visit Chen's village.
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Officials Discourage and Prevent "Independent Candidates" From Getting on Official Ballots in Local People's Congress Elections
During the latest round of local people's congress elections taking place in
staggered fashion across China from May 2011 to December 2012, central and local
officials are discouraging and preventing potential "independent
candidates," i.e., candidates nominated by citizens rather than by the
Party or by state-affiliated organizations, from getting on official ballots.
Citizens are allowed to vote for people's congress delegates only at the lowest
levels. Some developments during candidate nomination processes in this latest
round do not seem to reflect the spirit of the national election law, highlight
contradictions in the national election law, and illustrate continuing
challenges to free and fair elections in China. Some local officials reportedly
have arrested, detained, and monitored potential "independent
candidates," as well as pressured their families, employers, and
nominators, and obstructed nomination processes.
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Beijing Court Orders Human Rights Lawyer Gao Zhisheng To Serve Original Three-Year Sentence
Less than a week before missing human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng's five-year suspended sentence was set to expire, Chinese officials claimed he violated the conditions of his parole, and that he must now serve out his original three-year criminal sentence. Over the course of Gao's five-year parole period, officials have subjected him to intense harassment, including repeated abduction, torture, and forced disappearance. Even with this announcement, the whereabouts and condition of Gao, who has been missing since April 2010, are still not known.
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Local Officials in Xinjiang Continue Curbs Over Religious Practice
Controls over religion in the Muslim-majority region of Xinjiang remain among the harshest in China, and local governments have reported continuing steps to tighten curbs over religious practice. In recent months, several local governments have reported carrying out measures to prevent women from veiling or wearing other apparel deemed to carry religious connotations and to prevent men from wearing large beards, practices authorities have associated with "backwardness," "extremism," and "illegal religious activities." Some local governments also reported increasing controls over women religious specialists known as büwi. Regionwide, authorities have described continuing steps to target "illegal" religious publications in censorship campaigns.
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China's White Paper on Corruption and Official Anti-Corruption Efforts
The State Council of China issued China's first white paper on corruption titled "China's Efforts to Combat Corruption and Build a Clean Government" in late December 2010, amid an official "anti-corruption storm," high-profile arrests of corruption suspects, and ongoing announcements of new anti-corruption measures. While the white paper did not outline new policy directions, it gave unusual attention to citizen participation in anti-corruption efforts. Over the last few months, central authorities also promoted in the media official channels for citizens to report possible instances of corruption and outlined protections for whistleblowers in government circulars. Whistleblower protections, however, remain inadequate in practice and some non-governmental Web sites that posted reports on alleged corruption have faced cyber attacks and authorities have threatened to close Web sites or warned some webmasters to shut down their sites.
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Jiangsu Authorities Order Unregistered Pastor To Serve Two Years of Reeducation Through Labor
In late July 2011, authorities in Suqian city, Jiangsu province, ordered pastor Shi Enhao to serve two years in reeducation through labor (RTL) in connection to his activities as an unregistered pastor, including setting up churches and holding gatherings that authorities deemed illegal. Public security authorities in Jiangsu have harassed or detained Shi several times since March 2011. Shi is a leader in a network of unregistered Protestant congregations whose members associate across multiple provinces, and the RTL order came during a time when official sensitivities were heightened toward members of unregistered Protestant congregations.
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Xinjiang Draft Legal Measures Promote Hiring Ethnic Minorities, Against Track Record of Employment Discrimination
New draft measures on employment promotion, under consideration in Xinjiang, stipulate measures to prevent discrimination and promote the hiring of non-Han ("ethnic minority") groups in the region. The measures track China's national employment promotion law, but also stipulate subsidies for hiring ethnic minorities. Such subsidies are absent in the national law and employment promotion regulations in other provincial-level areas. If passed, the impact of the draft measures remains unclear, however, as previous laws and regulations already bar discrimination and have failed to prevent hiring practices in Xinjiang that discriminate against job candidates based on factors including ethnicity and sex.
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More Commission Analysis. . . |
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Upcoming Events |
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HEARING
Two Years Later: The Ongoing Detentions of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Liu Xiaobo and His Wife Liu Xia
Wednesday, December 12, 2012, 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
2172 Rayburn House Office Building
Two years ago, the Nobel Committee awarded the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize to prominent intellectual and democracy advocate Liu Xiaobo "for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China." Today, Liu Xiaobo remains in a Chinese prison serving the fourth year of an 11-year sentence, while authorities hold his wife under a de facto form of house arrest.
The hearing will discuss Liu's views on Chinese political reform and his co-authorship of Charter 08, a grassroots political reform treatise signed by thousands of Chinese citizens. The hearing will also discuss the essays that formed the basis of the government's "inciting subversion" charges against Liu. Witnesses will discuss Liu's current legal status and ongoing international advocacy efforts on Liu's behalf. In addition, witnesses will discuss conditions for Liu's wife, Liu Xia, whose illegal home confinement has been referred to as the "most severe retaliation by a government given to a Nobel winner's family."
Witnesses:
Carl Gershman, President, National Endowment for Democracy
Dr. Yang Jianli, President, Initiatives for China
Patrick Griffith, Program Attorney, Freedom Now
Yue Jie, Independent Author and Associate of Liu Xiaobo
Liu Min, Wife of Yu Jie; Friend of Liu Xiaobo and Liu Xia
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2012 Annual Report |
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2012 Annual Report
The Congressional-Executive Commission on China issued its 2012 Annual Report on human rights conditions and the development of the rule of law in China on October 10, 2012. Full Report: PDF version, text version
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Political Prisoner Database |
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Partial List of Political Prisoners Known or Believed to be Detained or Imprisoned in China as of October 10, 2012 (1,484 Cases)
View Record of Nobel Laureate Liu Xiaobo
Political Prisoner Database Representative Cases
Click here to search the full CECC Political Prisoner Database of over 7,014 cases as of October 10, 2012
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Special Reports |
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New: Special Report: Tibetan Self-Immolation—Rising Frequency, Wider Spread, Greater Diversity Issued August 22, 2012.
Web Introduction, PDF version
Special Report: Tibetan Monastic Self-Immolations Appear To Correlate
With Increasing Repression of Freedom of Religion. Issued December 23, 2011.
Web version,
PDF version
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Recent Events |
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HEARING
Working Conditions and Worker Rights in China: Recent Developments
Tuesday, July 31, 2012, 2:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
2200 Rayburn House Office Building
In recent months, several reports have been released regarding working conditions in Chinese factories that manufacture products popular in the United States�laptops, iPhones, iPads, cordless phones. These reports document excessive overtime, crowded and unsafe working and living conditions, underage workers, and unpaid wages. They note that Chinese workers do not have the right to organize into independent unions, and that the state-controlled union does little to represent them. Meanwhile, China has enacted laws in recent years intended to address worker issues, and the state-controlled union has pledged to better represent workers.
For related Commission analysis, please see "NGOs Report Harsh Conditions at Chinese Factories Making Popular Electronics."
The hearing's witnesses will discuss the prevalence of harsh working conditions in Chinese factories in places like Shenzhen and Shanghai, assess implementation of China's labor laws, and examine the roles the Chinese government, China's state-controlled union, Chinese NGOs, and private companies, including multinationals, play in addressing worker rights and labor reforms. Witnesses will also provide recommendations for U.S. policy on worker rights in China. View recorded webcast here.
HEARING
Recent Developments and History of the Chen Guangcheng Case
Thursday, May 3, 2012, 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
2172 Rayburn House Office Building
The recent escape of self-trained legal advocate Chen Guangcheng from illegal house arrest has attracted international attention and concern. On April 22, Chen escaped from his home in Dongshigu village, Linyi city, Shandong province, where he and his family had been detained without charge for 19 months. After escaping from home confinement, Chen met the U.S. Ambassador and Administration officials at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing and received medical treatment. Recent reports suggest that U.S. and Chinese officials have negotiated an agreement that would permit Chen and his family to remain in China with assurances from the Chinese government that they can live a normal life. The Commission hearing will address ongoing developments in the Chen Guangcheng case and reported prospects for himself, his family and his supporters. Witnesses will discuss details of the previous detention of Chen and his family under an illegal form of "house arrest," as well as his escape to seek safety at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. In addition, witnesses will also address Chen's legal advocacy work.
Chen, a self-trained legal advocate who has represented farmers, the disabled and other groups, is perhaps best known for the attention he drew to population planning abuses, particularly forced abortions and forced sterilizations, in Linyi, in 2005. In deeply flawed legal proceedings, authorities sentenced him in 2006 to four years and three months in prison. Following his release in September 2010, Chen, his wife Yuan Weijing, and their six-year-old daughter were subjected to beatings, home confinement and constant surveillance. Throughout the detention, Chinese authorities undertook forceful measures to prevent and harass journalists and supporters who attempted to visit the family.
View recorded webcast here.
HEARING
China's Repatriation of North Korean Refugees
Monday, March 5, 2012, 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
2118 Rayburn House Office Building
In recent weeks, international human rights advocates and organizations have called on the Chinese government not to repatriate dozens of North Korean refugees currently detained in China. There is now growing concern that the refugees and their family members may face public execution if the refugees are forcibly returned to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea). In January, Kim Jong-un, the "supreme leader" of North Korea, reportedly threatened to "exterminate three generations" of any family with a member caught defecting from North Korea during the 100-day mourning period for the late Kim Jong-il. Despite its obligations under international law, the Chinese government maintains an agreement with North Korea to repatriate North Korean refugees.
The Commission hearing will address the current predicament of North Korean refugees who have been detained by Chinese authorities in recent weeks. Witnesses will discuss the factors driving North Koreans to flee to China. Witnesses will also address the legality of China's forced repatriations of North Koreans and relevant humanitarian concerns.
View recorded webcast here.
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HEARING
The Case and Treatment of Prominent Human Rights Lawyer Gao Zhisheng
Tuesday, February 14, 2012, 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
2118 Rayburn House Office Building
Today, the condition of Gao Zhisheng, one of China's most prominent human rights lawyers, remains a closely guarded secret. In December 2011, the Chinese government announced Gao would be required to serve out his earlier three-year criminal sentence, just as his sentence suspension was about to expire. Gao, a self-taught lawyer who angered Chinese authorities by exposing human rights abuses, had been missing for more than 20 months, since "reappearing" from enforced disappearance in March 2010. Chinese officials have not released any news of Gao's health or condition, and Gao's family members and lawyers have been unable to visit him.
The Commission hearing focused on the latest announcement on Gao Zhisheng's criminal imprisonment and addressed concerns over his current well-being. Witnesses, including Gao Zhisheng's wife, addressed Gao's legal defense of marginalized groups in China—including religious practitioners, rural workers, and human rights activists—and his enforced disappearance. Other experts addressed ongoing international legal and humanitarian advocacy efforts on behalf of Gao. The hearing also featured testimony from the wife of another prominent jailed dissident, Guo Quan, who is serving a 10-year sentence and who, like Gao, has been punished for his human rights and democracy advocacy.
View recorded webcast here.
HEARING
Ten Years in the WTO: Has China Kept Its Promises?
Tuesday, December 13, 2011, 2:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
2212 Rayburn House Office Building
Ten years ago, on December 11, 2001, China officially joined the World Trade Organization. China's entry into the WTO ushered in a new era in its relationship with the United States and the rest of the world. China made numerous promises to reduce trade barriers, open up markets, increase transparency, protect intellectual property rights, and reform its legal system to make it consistent with WTO requirements. Policymakers hoped at the time that China's WTO membership would lead to advances in the broader development of the rule of law as well. Has China kept its promises and played by the rules? What impact has WTO membership had on the development of the rule of law in China? Has WTO membership leveled the economic playing field as many had hoped?
View recorded webcast here.
HEARING
One Year After the Nobel Peace Prize Award to Liu Xiaobo: Conditions for Political Prisoners and Prospects for Political Reform
Tuesday, December 6, 2011, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
2172 Rayburn House Office Building
One year ago, the Nobel Committee awarded the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize to Liu Xiaobo "for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China." Today, Liu Xiaobo remains in a Chinese prison serving the third year of an 11-year sentence, while authorities hold his wife under a de facto form of house arrest. Across China, authorities persist in harassing and detaining democracy and human rights advocates. This hearing discussed Liu's views on Chinese political reform and society; Charter 08, a grassroots political reform treatise signed by Liu and thousands of Chinese citizens; the essays that formed the basis of the government's "inciting subversion" charges against Liu; and the impact, if any, of Liu's Nobel Peace Prize in China. In addition, witnesses discussed conditions for other political prisoners and activists, as well as the prospects for political reform in China in the near future.
View recorded webcast here.
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HEARING
China's Censorship of the Internet and Social Media: The Human Toll and Trade Impact
Thursday, November 17, 2011, 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Washington, DC, Rayburn House Office Building, Room 2226
View recorded webcast here.
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Other Recent Events |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HEARING
Congressional-Executive Commission on China: 2011 Annual Report
Thursday, November 3, 2011, 10:00 a.m.
2172 Rayburn House Office Building
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HEARING
Examination into the Abuse and Extralegal Detention of Legal Advocate Chen Guangcheng and His Family
Tuesday, November 1, 2011, 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
2118 Rayburn House Office Building
View recorded hearing here.
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ROUNDTABLE
The Dalai Lama: What He Means for Tibetans Today (7/13/11)
Wednesday, July 13, 2011, 9:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.
Russell Senate Office Building, Room 418
View the recorded webcast here.
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ROUNDTABLE
Conditions for Human Rights Defenders and Lawyers in China, and Implications for U.S. Policy (6/23/11)
Thursday, June 23, 2011, 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Russell Senate Office Building, Room 328A
View the roundtable's recorded webcast.
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2011 Annual Report |
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2011 Annual Report
The Congressional-Executive Commission on China issued its 2011 Annual Report on human rights conditions and the development of the rule of law in China on October 10, 2011. Full Report: PDF version, text version Executive Summary: PDF version Chinese Translation of the Executive Summary: PDF version
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Other Events |
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HEARING
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Liu Xiaobo and the Future of Political Reform in China (11/9/10)
Tuesday, November 9, 2010, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628
View a recorded video of this hearing here.
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ROUNDTABLE
2010 Annual Report: New Developments in Human Rights and the Rule of Law in China (10/20/10)
Wednesday, October 20, 2010, 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628
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HEARING
Will China Protect Intellectual Property? New Developments in Counterfeiting, Piracy, and Forced Technology Transfer (9/22/10)
Wednesday, September 22, 2010, 2:15 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628
View a recorded video of this hearing.
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ROUNDTABLE
China and Human Trafficking: Updates and Analysis (8/20/10)
Friday, August 20, 2010, 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628
View recorded C-SPAN video coverage here.
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HEARING
Political Prisoners in China: Trends and Implications for U.S. Policy (8/3/10)
Tuesday August 3, 2010, 10:15 a.m. to 12 noon
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628
View a recorded video of this hearing.
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ROUNDTABLE
China's Far West: Conditions in Xinjiang One Year After Demonstrations and Riots (7/19/10)
Monday, July 19, 2010, 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 628
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ROUNDTABLE
Prospects for Democracy in Hong Kong: Assessing China's International Commitments (7/14/10)
Wednesday, July 14, 2010, 3:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Room 138, Dirksen Senate Office Building
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ROUNDTABLE
China's Policies Toward Spiritual Movements (6/18/10)
Friday, June 18, 2010, 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Room 628, Dirksen Senate Office Building
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ROUNDTABLE
Transparency in Environmental Protection and Climate Change in China (4/1/10)
Thursday, April 1, 2010, 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Room 628, Dirksen Senate Office Building
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HEARING
Google and Internet Control in China: A Nexus Between Human Rights and Trade? (3/24/10)
Wednesday, March 24, 2010, 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Room 628, Dirksen Senate Office Building
View a recorded video of this hearing.
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ROUNDTABLE
Women in a Changing China (3/8/10)
Monday, March 8, 2010, 2 to 3:30 p.m.
Room B-318, Rayburn House Office Building.
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Special Topic Paper |
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The Congressional-Executive Commission on China issued a special report titled Special Topic Paper: Tibet 2008-2009 on October 22, 2009. The report provides expanded coverage and in-depth analysis of key recent developments and trends in Tibet and builds on the Commission's 2009 Annual Report.
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Commission Roundtables and Panel Discussions |
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- 2010 Annual Report: New Developments in Human Rights and the Rule of Law in China (10/20/10)
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- China and Human Trafficking: Updates and Analysis (8/20/10)
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- China's Far West: Conditions in Xinjiang One Year After the Demonstrations and Riots (7/19/10)
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- Prospects for Democracy in Hong Kong: Assessing China's International Commitments (7/14/10)
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- China's Policies Toward Spiritual Movements (6/18/10)
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- Transparency in Environmental Protection and Climate Change in China (4/1/10)
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- Women in a Changing China (3/8/10)
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- China's Citizen Complaint System: Prospects for Accountability (12/04/09)
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- Gao Yaojie: Physician, Grandmother, and Whistleblower in China's Fight Against HIV/AIDS (12/03/09)
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- Reporting the News in China: First-Hand Accounts and Current Trends (7/31/09)
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- China's Human Rights Lawyers: Current Challenges and Prospects (7/10/09)
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- The Financial Crisis and the Changing Role of Workers in China (6/19/09)
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- What "Democracy" Means in China After Thirty Years of Reform (5/22/09)
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- The Rising Stakes of Refugee Issues in China (5/1/09)
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- A Year After the March 2008 Protests: Is China Promoting Stability in Tibet? (3/13/09)
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- Does China Have a Stability Problem? (2/27/09)
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- Human Rights in Xinjiang: Recent Developments (2/13/09)
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- The UN Human Rights Council's Review of China's Record: Process and Challenges (1/16/09)
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- Human Rights and Rule of Law in China: Where Are We Now and Where Do We Go From Here? (12/12/08)
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- On the Eve of the Beijing Olympics: China's Information Lockdown (7/16/08)
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Xinjiang: Rights Abuses in China's Muslim Western Region (5/14/08)
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More Roundtables. . .
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Annual Reports |
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2009 Annual Report
The Congressional-Executive Commission on China issued its 2009 Annual Report on human rights conditions and the development of the rule of law in China on October 10, 2009. Click here for the full report (text/(pdf).
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2008 Annual Report
The Congressional-Executive Commission on China issued its 2008 Annual Report on human rights conditions and the development of the rule of law in China on Friday, October 31, 2008. Click here for the full report (text/pdf).
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2007 Annual Report
The Congressional-Executive Commission on China issued its 2007 Annual Report on human rights conditions and the development of the rule of law in China on Wednesday, October 10, 2007. Click here for the full report (text/pdf).
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CECC Special Topics |
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Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Liu Xiaobo
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- Xinjiang Demonstrations
- See also the CECC Chairman's and Cochairman's Statement on the Xinjiang Demonstrations.
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Universal Periodic Review (UPR)
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Charter 08
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Human Rights Day
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- China's Olympic Commitments
- See also the CECC Chairman's and Cochairman's Statement on China's Olympic Commitments. Click here for the full transcript and supporting materials from the Commission's Hearing on "The Impact of the 2008 Olympic Games on Human Rights and the Rule of Law in China."
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- Tibetan Protests
- See also the CECC Chairman's Statement on the Tibetan Protests.
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- China's Household Registration System
- Available in English (html or pdf) and Chinese (html or pdf).
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- Newsletter Archives
- Click here to join our mailing list.
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Commission Hearings |
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- "Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Liu Xiaobo and the Future of Political Reform in China" (11/9/10)
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- "Will China Protect Intellectual Property? New Developments in Counterfeiting, Piracy, and Forced Technology Transfer" (9/22/10)
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- "Political Prisoners in China: Trends and Implications for U.S. Policy" (8/3/10)
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- Google and Internet Control in China: A Nexus Between Human Rights and Trade? (3/24/10)
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- Human Rights and the Rule of Law in China (10/7/09)
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- The 20th Anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Protests: Examining the Significance of the 1989 Demonstrations in China and Implications for U.S. Policy (6/4/09)
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- What Will Drive China's Future Legal Development? Reports from the Field (6/18/08)
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- The Impact of the 2008 Olympic Games on Human Rights and the Rule of Law in China (02/27/08)
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- Human Rights and Rule of Law in China (09/20/06)
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- Combating Human Trafficking in China: Domestic and International Efforts (03/06/06)
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- Law in Political Transitions: Lessons from East Asia and the Road Ahead for China (7/26/05)
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- Religious Freedom in China (11/18/04)
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More Hearings. . .
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