Christianity in Chinese public life ...
Carpenter, Joel,

 

  • Christianity in Chinese public life :religion, society, and the rule of law /
  • 紀錄類型: 書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
    杜威分類號: 322/.10951
    書名/作者: Christianity in Chinese public life : : religion, society, and the rule of law // Joel Carpenter and Kevin den Dulk.
    作者: Carpenter, Joel,
    其他作者: Dulk, Kevin R. den,
    面頁冊數: 1 online resource.
    標題: Church and state - China.
    標題: Religion and state - China.
    標題: Church and state.
    標題: Religion and state.
    標題: China.
    ISBN: 1137410183 (electronic bk.)
    ISBN: 9781137410184 (electronic bk.)
    內容註: Introduction; Joel Carpenter -- Reshaping the Civic Space: The Rise of Unregistered Protestantism and Civic Engagement in Urban China; Li Ma and Jin Li -- Belief, Ethnicity and State: Christianity of Koreans in Northeastern China and their Ethnic and National Identitiess; Juhong Ai -- The Rise of a Human Rights Studies and Education Movement in China; Zhang Wei -- The Importance of Gathering Together: Religious Land Use in the U.S. and China; Jennifer E. Walsh -- Political Constitution and the Protection of Religious Freedom: A Jurisprudential -- Reading of the Article 36 of Chinese Constitution; Zheng Yushuang -- Religion and Rights Revolution in China: A Cross-National Perspective; Kevin R. den Dulk.
    摘要、提要註: Today a quarter of all Chinese claim a major religious tradition, yet the state remains deeply concerned about religious activity. The West tends to view religion-and-state relations in China in bipolar terms: dissidents' resistance and government repression. But as this work shows, the interaction of religion, society, and governance in China is much more subtle and complex than that. The contributors of this volume focus on Christianity in China to examine the prospects for social and political change. Students of democratization say that when citizens escape poverty, they seek more freedom of expression and they establish agencies to express those values. The resulting 'civil society' helps citizens mediate between their interests and those of the state and seek the public good through non-governmental means. "Christianity in Chinese Public Life" deftly explores the question: does an increase of religious activity in China amount to a nudging forward of democratization?
    電子資源: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137410184
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