Communications, External (Duìwài chuánbō 对外传播)|Duìwài chuánbō 对外传播 (Communications, External)
GUO Ke External communication refers to broadcast information that is meant for a foreign audience. Similar to the United States’
By ChinaConnectU|2014-12-16T16:53:50-05:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Governance|
GUO Ke External communication refers to broadcast information that is meant for a foreign audience. Similar to the United States’
By ChinaConnectU|2014-12-16T16:53:50-05:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Governance|
Left to right: Robert Scalapino, Stephen A. Orlins, and Lucien Pye, at the 3 May 2006 NCUSCR program “Past as
By ChinaConnectU|2014-12-16T16:53:51-05:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Governance|
Bent NIELSEN The East China Sea—part of the western Pacific Ocean—is China’s most important marine fishing area. The sea also
By ChinaConnectU|2014-12-16T16:53:51-05:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Governance|
Nirmal DASS Wen Tingyun, a Tang dynasty lyric poet whose themes were unconventional for his time—and whose verses and songs
By ChinaConnectU|2014-12-16T16:53:51-05:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Governance|
Alan BAUMLER Guangzhou (Canton), China’s major trading port, in the late nineteenth century. Guangzhou was the only port open to
By ChinaConnectU|2014-12-16T16:53:51-05:00January 23rd, 2012|Berkshire Encyclopedia of China, Governance, Warfare|
Bent NIELSEN Quemoy and Matsu are part of a group of fifteen islands located off the coast of Fujian Province.