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Members of Editorial Board


Yu Dahai,     Wang Dan

Hu Ping,     Xue Wei

Chen Kuide,     Zheng Yi

 

 

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Fang Lizhi

Situ Hua

Yu Ying-shi

Perry Link

Yang Liyu

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HUMAN RIGHTS

  • National Endowment for Democracy
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  • Carnegie Endowment
  • The Heritage Foundation
  • Hoover Institute
  • The PEW Research Center
  • Jamestown Foundation
  • Beijing spring Nov. 2006, Issue 162
     

    Brief of No.162:

    The November issue of Beijing Spring published in October used Chen Liangyu, who was just dismissed from member of the Political Bureau, member of the Central Committee and Secretary of the CCP Committee of Shanghai as the cover topic and published some brilliant articles about the social, political and economic problems of China. .......

    Table of Contents
    Words from the Editor in Chief
    03. / Hu Ping ...... The unavoidable economic liquidation problem

    Words from the President
    04. / Wang Dan ...... Who is the next after Chen Liangyu

    Cover Topic: The case of the past ten year
    06. / Tian Nan (Beijing), Dibei (Shanghai) ...... Chen Liangyu and the Sixth Plenary Session of the Central Committee
    12. / Zhu Changchao (Shanghai) ......The corrupted historical cycle
    14. / Rufeng (Shanghai) ......What if Chen Liangyu were not dismissed
    16. / Gong Shengli (Guangzhou) ......From Chen Xitong to Chen Liangyu
    18. / Fan Baihua (Jiangsu) ......What is the difference even if Jiang Zeming is arrested"

    Chinese Political Situation
    22. / Chen Xiaoya (Beijing) ......Perspective of the Mao Zedong fever in the present age
    30. / Nanzhou (Janpan) ......Memory of the criticism
    37. / Sheng Li (Guangzhou) ...... The new "Supervision Law" of China and its historical defection

    The Divine Land of China
    39. / Xiaoshu (Beijing) ......China needs Guo Feixiong
    43. / Mu Chuanheng (Shandong) ...... The human rights tragedy of farmer workers in China
    46. / Guo Shaokun (Jiangsu) ...... The truth of Falun Gong

    Discussion Group of Culture
    49. / Donghai Yixiao (Guangxi) ...... Cleanse "The spring and autumn"
    Study on the Cultural Revolution
    54. / Hu Ping ......Why did Mao Zedong launch the Cultural Revolution
    61. / Zhou Zehao ...... The First anti-Confucius movement in the Cultural Revolution
    68. / Xiao Weng (Hunan) ......The forgotten story of killing in the Cultural Revolution

    Relationships between Mainland China and Taiwan
    72. / Wang Youcai ...... An urgent appeal about the current situation in Taiwan
    73. / Zeng Jianyuan (Taiwan) ...... How will the progressive revision to the constitution be possible?

    Historical Witness
    76. / Yang Kuanxing (Shangdong) ...... Memory of Liu Xianbing when he has been in prison for seven years
    79. / Hanshan ...... The mismatch of history

    Wall of Democracy
    81. / Chen Pokong ......Commonsense about China (3)
    83. / Wang Tianzeng (Japan) ...... October 1st: the national memorial day
    86. / Mu Zhengxin (Canada) ...... Lei Feng is the paragon officially manipulated

    Reading
    87. / Shu Chong ...... Editor in Chief of the tabloid of red guards thus said
    90. / Zhang Yaojie (Beijing) ...... The legal stories in the American history
    95. / Liao Kang ...... Comments on the long story of Xie Baoyu - The Rose Dam

    Garden of Literature & Art
    99. / Muxin (Jiangsu) ...... Humor about the officialdom of China
    100. / Lielei (Guangzhou) ...... Rewriting of the poems of Mao

    Brief News
    101. / Award granted to exceptional pro-democracy activists by the Democratic Education Foundation
    103. / Brief News

    Readers, writers and editors
    106. / Selected letters from readers
    100. / Acknowledgement

     


    Members of Beijing Spring's Advisory Board

    Fang Lizhi, professor of physics at University of Arizona. As the former vice president of Chinese University of Science and Technology, he inspired the 1989's Chinese Democracy movement and then was forced to seek refuge in the American Embassy for about a year after the June 4 crackdown.

    Guo Luoji, a leading liberal theoretician who was driven out of Beijing by Former Chairman Deng Xiaoping because of his political opinion. In 1992, he sued the Chinese government for human rights abuses in a Federal Court of law. Now he is a visiting scholar at Harvard University.

    Smarlo Ma Smarlo Ma is pen name of Mr. Yi Ma. Joining the CommunistParty of China in 1937, he became Director of the Library of the Anti-Japanese Military and Political College in Yan-an in 1938. He formally left the Party in 1943. as a well known expert on the history of the Communist party of china, he has often been invited to present papers in international conferences of Asian specialists. He has published mora than 20 books.

    Perry Link, professor of East Asian Studies at Princeton University. He specializes in 20th-century Chinese literature and is very concerned with human rights condition in Mainland China.

    Liu Qing, Chairman of the Executive Committee of Human Rights in China. As a democracy promoter and a close ally of Wei Jingsheng, he had been jailed by Chinese government for almost ten years.

    Andrew Nathan, professor of Political Science and Director of East Asian Institute at Columbia University. His teaching and research interests include Chinese politics and foreign policy, the comparative study of political participation and political culture, and human rights. He has published numerous books and articles on China's politics.

    Situ Hua, president of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic and Democratic Movement in China. Mr. Situ is a member of the Hong Kong legislature and an important leader of the Democratic Party of Hong Kong.

    Su Shaozhi, chairman of Princeton China Initiative. Once served as the director of the Institute of Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, he is a leading liberal political theoretician in China.

    Su Xiaokang, a Chinese writer well known for his epic The River's Elegy, a critical television program about China's political and cultural evolution. As an active participator in the 1989 democracy movement, he was forced to leave China. Now he is a fellow of the Princeton China Initiative and publisher of the bi-monthly journal "The Democratic China".

    Yang Liyu, professor of East Asian Studies at Seton Hall University

    Yu Ying-shi, professor of history at Princeton University. Mr. Yu has been a leading critic on the tyranny of the Chinese communists after he left China in 1950. After the Chinese government crackdown on the Democracy Movement in 1989, he devoted himself into helping the fled Chinese activists to settle down in the U.S and setting up the Princeton China Initiative.


    Members of Beijing Spring's Editorial Board

    Yu Dahai, Publisher of Beijing Spring and assistant professor of economics at Tufts University. Graduated from Beijing University and received a Ph.D. degree from Princeton University, he served as Chief Editor of Beijing Spring from June 1993 to June 1996 and then as President from June 1996 to September 2002. He is founding president of the Chinese Economists Society and former president of the Chinese Alliance for Democracy and the China Spring magazine.

    Wang Dan, President of Beijing Spring since September 2002. As a student leader from Beijing University in the 1989's Democracy Movement, he was on the most wanted list of the Chinese government after the June 4 crackdown. After being imprisoned for political reasons from July 1989 to February 1993 and again from May 1995 to April 1998, he came to the United States ad is now a doctoral student in Harvard University.

    Hu Ping, Chief Editor of Beijing Spring since 1996 and a regular commentator for Radio Free Asia. Received a Master's degree in philosophy from Beijing University and studied at Harvard University, he was once the Chief Writer of Beijing Spring from June 1993 to June 1996. He is former president of the Chinese Alliance for Democracy and the China Spring magazine.

    Chen Kuide, fellow of Princeton China Initiative and program host for Radio Free Asia. As once the Chief Editor of Shanghai's Thinker magazine, he actively took part in the 1989 democracy movement. He later received a Ph.D. degree in philosophy from Fudan University.

    Zheng Yi, member of the Princeton China initiative and a famous political critic. He once wrote articles to expose the cannibalism in Guangxi during the Great Cultural Revolution in China. As an important leader of the 1989 democracy movement, he was forced to leave China in 1992.

    Xue Wei, Manager of Beijing Spring since 1993. He was imprisoned in Sichuan for ten years for "counter-revolutionary activities" in the 1970's. He was among the founding members of the Chinese Alliance for Democracy and the China Spring magazine and has always served as a leader in promoting Chinese Democracy Movement dating back 1982.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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