BOOKS




THE CURRENT DIGEST OF THE CHINESE PRESS


ISSN: 2159-3612 (online)
Language: English
Frequency: Weekly
Year First Published: 2012
Published in: Minneapolis

2013 Pricing
Online
Institutional $965.00
Individual US $230.00
Individual non-US $230.00

DESCRIPTION

Each week The Current Digest of the Chinese Press presents a digestible collection of articles from key Chinese news sources on such topics as politics, international relations, security, economics, business, public health, environment, education, culture and more. Articles are selected from a variety of sources in China, all of which are explicitly targeted on a domestic – not foreign – audience.

The rise of China is one of the compelling stories of our time. Yet it can be difficult for a person with an abiding interest in China to get a broad-survey, comprehensive understanding of current events as reported by mass media in the People's Republic of China, especially if he or she lacks Chinese-language fluency. 

Likewise, as the media in China are far from free, any China-borne attempt to represent a broad picture of China is bound to lack perspective and worse, probably has a specific agenda. The Current Digest of the Chinese Press removes such obstacles, offering readers, regardless of Chinese language ability, a much clearer (if more complex) view of the current Chinese reality.

 

FEATURED CONTENT


Sergey Lavrov: Perpetual Reset Means a Glitch in the System

Russian Muslims and the "Arab Spring"

From the Archives:

National Archetypes of Russia's Foreign Policy (No. 2, 2009)


The Secrets of Zhongnanhai: Who Wiretapped Mao Zedong, and How?

From the Archives:

Territory-Specific Behavior in Russia's Far East: Economic and Sociological Analysis (No. 1, 2008)


Information Technology Applied to Forecast Development Trends in International Conflicts

From the Archives:

Russia and Challenges of the 21st Century (No. 2, 2009)


Addressing the Nationalities Issue in the North Caucasus

From the Archives:

(Book Review)The Fates of the Academic Elite: Russian Slav Studies, 1917-Early 1930s (No. 1, 2007)