Institution File
Xinjiang Minority Child Boarding and Welfare Placement System
Handles care, boarding, and language education after parental detention or absence.
Contents
Formal position
Handles care, boarding, and language education after parental detention or absence. This file separates legal mandate, Party leadership, and operational interfaces. Possession of authority does not establish its use in every case; decisions, personnel, places, and chronology still require proof.
Authority and tools
The system can use registration, approval, lists, investigation, facility control, data access, education, medical processes, or personnel coordination. These tools have different legal effects. Formal coercion should have approval and oversight, administration should allow review, and informal pressure is harder to challenge.
Institutional interfaces
Superior political and policy bodies set direction, competent departments issue rules, and local or grassroots units implement. Police, procurators, courts, hospitals, schools, companies, or communities enter by issue. More interfaces make it necessary to separate decision, execution, and public explanation.
Power logic
Capacity comes from persistent records and cross-agency cooperation. A person can be classified before entering a procedure, and the result returns to the file and shapes later treatment. Closed records and diffuse responsibility reward wider restriction.
Evidence limits
Official white papers and regulations state institutional purposes, while UN and other external material records disputes and cases. Both must appear together. [1] [2]
Sources
- Regulations on Religious Affairsprimary-record
- Ministry of Justice Explanation of the Religious Affairs Regulationprimary-record
- Population and Family Planning Law of the PRCprimary-record
- White Paper on Vocational Education and Training in Xinjiangprimary-record
- White Paper on Counterterrorism, Deradicalization, and Human Rights in Xinjiangprimary-record
- White Paper on Equal Rights of Ethnic Groups in Xinjiangprimary-record
- White Paper on Human Rights in Tibet in the New Eraprimary-record
- White Paper on China's Policies and Practices on Protecting Freedom of Religious Beliefprimary-record
- OHCHR Assessment of Human Rights Concerns in Xinjianggovernment-report
- UN Experts' Statement on Tibetan Residential Schoolsgovernment-report
- UN Experts on Family Separation and Language Policy Affecting Uyghur Childrengovernment-report
- UN Experts on Reported Forced Labour of Uyghur, Tibetan, and Other Minoritiesgovernment-report
- China Ratifies Two ILO Forced Labour Conventionsofficial-finding
- U.S. Department of Labor Report on Forced Labor in Xinjianggovernment-report
- U.S. Department of Labor List of Goods Linked to Forced Labor in Chinagovernment-report
- Treasury Sanctions on Biometric Surveillance Technologyofficial-finding
- 2024 U.S. State Department Human Rights Report on Chinagovernment-report
- CECC 2025 Annual Reportgovernment-report
- UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Findings after China Visitgovernment-report
- UN Special Rapporteur's Record of Torture Allegations Involving Falun Gong Practitionersgovernment-report
- Human Rights Watch World Report 2026: Chinainvestigative-reporting