Hey Qinglian

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hey Qinglian

He Qinglian (Simplified Chinese: 何清涟; Traditional Chinese: 何清漣; Pinyin: Hé Qīnglián; * 1956 ) is a Chinese author and economist and social scientist known for her critical view of Chinese society and media control in China .

biography

He Qinglian, born in 1956, is an economist and social scientist and currently works at the Institute “Human Rights in China” (http://iso.hrichina.org) in New York. She studied history from 1979 to 1983 at Hunan Normal University . After completing her studies in economics at the University of Fudan in Shanghai in 1988 He Qinglian worked in the propaganda department of the city committee of the Communist Party in Shenzhen before she joined the editorial staff of the newspaper Shenzhen Legal Daily and held simultaneously at the University of Jinan. She has authored many articles and several books on Chinese society and economy. Her best-known book, China in the Modernization Trap (现代化 的 陷阱), sold over 100,000 copies in China and won recognition from society and the economy. In her book, China in the Modernization Trap , she argues that with the transfer of power to local governments, local officials who previously advocated reform later opposed further reform because it could restrict their freedom of choice and thus make it harder for them to gain power playing for money and money for power. In the book published in Hong Kong in 1977, the economist fundamentally dispels the myth of change through trade . In the last part of the book, she also discussed the reappearance of family clans in power in Guangdong and Fujian provinces. Her articles, which hint at deep structural problems and state that thorough political reform will be necessary if economic reform is successful, displeased some Chinese government officials. Because of her articles, she experienced more and more pressure in China and fled abroad on June 14, 2001. She now lives in the United States. Your theses have not lost their importance to this day.

He Qinglian's articles appear often in Chinese foreign media. Her book The Fog of Censorship: Media Control in China (中国 政府 如何 控制 媒体) was published in Chinese by Human Rights in China in 2004 , with a summary in English. In addition, it appeared on the scientific website wissenschaftlichen 中国 研究 ( Modern China Studies ) in New Jersey in a quarterly series. In 2006, Liming Cultural Enterprises in Taipei published a revised and expanded edition. The online newspaper Epoch Times published an abridged version of the foreword to the book The Fog of Censorship in its article Legends Are Unmasked .

He Qinglian has 136741 followers on her Twitter account with 30,526 tweets.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. World Media Summit had peculiar allies in China. Epoch Times, November 3, 2009, accessed August 18, 2017 .
  2. He Qinglian: Tag Archives: He Qinglian. CHINA CHANGE, September 30, 2015, accessed August 18, 2017 .
  3. Legends are revealed. Epoch Times, October 9, 2009, accessed August 18, 2017 .
  4. He Qinglian (@HeQinglian) Twitter Statistics. socialbakers, August 18, 2017, accessed on August 18, 2017 .