| What We Do / Research and Publications / China Rights Forum / 2004: Gray Zones - Tiananmen - Labor Rights - Children / CRF 2004, No.3 - Human Rights for the Millions |
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CRF 2004, No.3 - Human Rights for the Millions
In the Factories In Cyberspace In the Countryside Regular Features![[CRF No.3, 2004 cover]](http://www.hrichina.org/public/resources/CRF-covers/CRF-2004-3_cover.gif)
Union leader John Sweeney describes why the rights of Chinese workers are of vital interest to the rest of the world.
Fu Hualing and D.W.Choy chart the increasing ineffectiveness of labor mediation under China's economic reform,and a growing trend of workers taking recourse in the courts.
HRIC and China Labour Bulletin examine how state secrets legislation is used to conceal the plight of China's workers, and prevents effective addressing of core problems.
Hu Ping observes that Chinese workers are becoming more aware of their rights as the government's control over information about labor conditions is gradually eroded.
Sharon Hom, Amy Tai and Gabriel Nichols call for alliances of conscience that will ensure that the Internet and other advanced technologies function as a force for beneficial change rather than effective tools of repression in China.
Bill Xia examines a paradoxical situation in which the Chinese government's excessive censorship of information may eventually lead to a collapse of the entire system of control.
This online essay was one of the main pieces of evidence used by Chinese authorities to convict Du Daobin of slander and subversion.
Zheng Yichun observes that Du Daobin's "lenient" suspended sentence in fact presents Chinese authorities with an effective means to discourage free expression.
Ren Bumei, another harassed Internet essayist, reflects on the experience of internal exile.
Liu Xiaobo in this online essay calls on the Beijing government to take initiative in resolving its acrimonious relationship with the SAR.
Legal scholar Yu Meisun describes a day evading Public Security authorities as he seeks to assist peasants appealing to the central authorities over misappropriation of village funds.
Zhao Yan, a journalist, has drawn official wrath with his muckraking stories about village corruption. This is one of them.
Sociologist Zhang Youjie recounts a panicked phone call from a peasant advocate under pursuit by the authorities.
A petition by villagers of Zigong City, Sichuan Province alleges that a clique of local officials has absconded with the funds meant to compensate them for their land.
A translated excerpt from Chinese Peasantry: A Survey, by Chen Guidi and Wu Chuntao, describing a bloody conflict between corrupt officials and villagers defending their rights.
A conversation about developments in China and the need for new strategies in pressing for human rights and democratic reform.
In Search of the Soul of Lin Zhao
Jin Zhong on a new documentary about "China's Joan of Arc."
Tilting at Windmills
Tom Kellogg reviews Wild Grass: Three Stories of Change in Modern China, by Ian Johnson.
Hope for a Greener China
Andrea Worden reviews The River Runs Black: The Environmental Challenge to China's Future, by Elizabeth Economy.
The Beastly Poet of China
Stacy Mosher reviews A Bilingual Edition of Poetry Out of Communist China by Huang Xiang, translated by Andrew G. Emerson.
An Updated List of Imprisoned Labor Activists
Liu Fenggang
What you can do about the issues discussed.
HRIC's activities in May through early August 2004.
An update on contracts and sponsorships for the Beijing Olympics.
