Hu Deping talks political reform
In an interview in The Beijing News, Hu Deping, the eldest son of former senior leader Hu Yaobang, discusses the need for political reform.
In an interview in The Beijing News, Hu Deping, the eldest son of former senior leader Hu Yaobang, discusses the need for political reform.
A Chinese journal argues that China’s Constitution (right, published May 1986) provides the needed “consensus” for political reform.
What does the Party’s recent political report tell us about the prospects for political reform in China? Attend this public lecture to find out.
Scholar Yu Jianrong posts a ten-year plan for social and political development in China on his microblog.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao returned to the theme of political reform during a speech at the World Economic Forum on September 14.
Political reform is virtually invisible on the agenda at the NPC. But it may be the answer to many of the session’s toughest questions.
After news that a private firm was hired to run “black jails”, Xiao Shu argues that China’s political system is in urgent need of reform.
As Hu Jintao’s Shenzhen speech disappoints on the question of political reform, Xiao Shu returns to the more forward-looking words of Premier Wen Jiabao last month, and says reform should begin with the building of civil society.
After Wen Jiabao urges political reform in a Shenzhen speech, He Weifang argues that free speech would be a first step.
Capitalizing on Wen Jiabao’s call to deepen political reform, Hu Shuli argues that political reform can no longer be delayed in China.