Operating Mechanism
Securitization
This index follows the same process across different institutions and public issues.
Party Organization and Elite PoliticsState Institutions, Law, and Policy ExecutionPolitical Economy and Resource AllocationSocial Governance, Demography, and WelfareIdeology, Education, and Historical MemoryMilitary, National Security, and War MobilizationPropaganda, Culture, and Public OpinionDigital Governance, Censorship, and SurveillanceHuman Rights, Ethnicity, Religion, and RepressionForeign Policy, Taiwan, and Global StrategyOverseas United Front, Influence, and Transnational Repression
Articles
134- The People's Armed Police: The Boundary Between Internal Security and Military CommandThe armed police conduct counterterrorism, emergency response, and protection of key sites under a system linking military command and domestic security.
- Do Not Romanticize Resistance: Protect Speakers By Understanding CostWhy real support for speakers requires understanding stability costs rather than consuming others' risk emotionally.
- The Big-Picture Template: Sacrificing Rights To An Abstract CollectiveHow phrases like big picture, stability, and national interest make individual rights claims seem improper.
- Facial, Voice, Gait, and Vehicle Recognition as Control InterfacesCollection, matching, error, and the conversion of multimodal recognition into coercive action.
- Black Jails and Petitioner Interception: How Local Responsibility Produces Extralegal CustodyBeijing interception, contracted security, temporary facilities, forced return, and fragmented responsibility.
- Belt and Road Debt RestructuringDebt problems in major projects involve borrower choices, policy banks, contractors, exchange rates, and domestic politics.
- The Sitong Bridge Slogan: How One Banner Triggered Citywide ControlHow the Sitong Bridge protest exposed the stability logic connecting sensitive periods, public space, keywords, and imitation risk.
- The 709 Lawyers: How A Legal Profession Was Turned Into A ThreatA case study of how rights lawyers, law firms, families, licenses, and media narratives were absorbed into a security campaign.
- Zhang Zhan, Fang Bin, Chen Qiushi: How Public Documentation Was CriminalizedA case study of why documenting the early Wuhan outbreak was treated as public-order risk.
- Early Rain Covenant And Wang Yi: How Faith Space Was Administratively ControlledA case study of how unregistered religious space was absorbed into registration, enforcement, criminal law, and ideology control.
- Hong Kong National-Security Cases: How A Free City Was Institutionally Taken OverA case study of how national-security logic reshaped Hong Kong's media, assembly, elections, associations, and courts.
- Ilham Tohti: Why Moderate Expression Was Still CriminalizedA case study of how moderate discussion, scholarship, and ethnic dialogue were recoded as separatist danger.
- Labor And Feminist Activists: How Public Issues Became Order RisksA case study of how labor rights, gender equality, mutual support gatherings, and public discussion were recoded as subversion.
- Uyghur Scholars And Cultural Figures: How Identity Memory Was SecuritizedA case study of how scholarship, folklore, art, and cultural memory were recoded as national-security risk.
- Xu Zhiyong And Ding Jiaxi: How Civil Society Was SecuritizedA case study of how meetings, advocacy, public responsibility, and constitutional discussion were recoded as subversion.
- The Chained Woman Case: Trafficked Women, Local Complicity, And Information ControlA case study of how local governance, bodily freedom, women's rights, trafficking chains, and information control failed together.
- The Yang Gailan Case: Poverty, Welfare Failure, And Local Responsibility ShiftingA case study of poverty relief, local governance, family distress, and public responsibility that became visible too late.
- Central Financial Commission: Bringing Financial Risk into the Party Leadership ChainSeparating political direction, regulatory execution, central-bank tools, and local risk disposal.
- The Central Foreign Affairs Commission: Foreign Policy Beyond the Foreign MinistryThe Central Foreign Affairs Commission sets major direction and coordinates agencies, while the Foreign Ministry carries out policy and professional diplomacy.
- The Central Military Commission: Direct Party Command of Armed ForceThe Central Military Commission is the organizational center of Party command over the PLA and armed police; military nationalization is not the institutional objective.
- CIDCA and the Belt and Road: Aid, Lending, and StrategyForeign aid, policy finance, state-firm projects, and diplomatic agreements form the development-cooperation toolkit.
- Citizen Journalists: Why Recording Reality Can Be CriminalizedHow citizen journalists break the official narrative monopoly and are punished through order and rumor language.
- Civil-Military Fusion: Moving Technology, Capital, and Talent Into DefenseCivil-military fusion seeks to shorten the distance between civilian research, supply chains, and military demand.
- Corporate Self-Censorship: Market Access As Political PressureHow market access, supply chains, advertising, endorsements, and regulatory risk push companies toward CCP political boundaries.
- Courts, Procuratorates, and Adjudication CommitteesCourts and procuratorates have professional procedures, but political-legal coordination, Party leadership, adjudication committees, and performance systems shape sensitive cases.
- The CPPCC and Consultative IncorporationThe CPPCC incorporates parties, sectors, ethnic and religious representatives, and elites into consultation without becoming an independent center of power.
- Data Governance And Social Control: Technology In Stability MaintenanceHealth codes, grid data, cameras, and platform records can shift from public service to risk identification and enforcement.
- Timeline of Digital Governance and CensorshipA timeline of network access, real-name systems, platform responsibility, cyberspace regulators, data security, algorithms, and generative AI rules.
- Digital Surveillance and Human Rights: From Cameras and Platforms to Offline ActionA five-stage account of collection, linkage, classification, dispatch, and action.
- Discipline And Supervision: How Internal Fear Maintains LoyaltyWhy discipline inspection is both an anti-corruption tool and a technology of loyalty control.
- Documenting Transnational Repression: Preserving Evidence Without Expanding RiskA safety-first method for victims, community groups, and media documenting threats, harassment, coerced return, and family pressure.
- Economic Coercion and Market AccessTrade, tourism, regulation, procurement, and consumer mobilization can impose selective costs in diplomatic disputes.
- Education And Language Control: How Identity Is Rewritten From ChildhoodHow schools, preschools, boarding, Mandarin policy, textbooks, and political education reshape minority identity across generations.
- Exit Bans: Legal Grounds, Border Lists, and Family SpilloverCriminal, civil, and national-security exit restrictions, notice, duration, and remedy.
- Institutional History, Legal Tools, and Evidence Limits in the Falun Gong CrackdownSeparating the 1999 political decision, legal prohibition, propaganda, detention, and grave-abuse allegations.
- Punishing Families: Why The CCP Targets A Person's Relationship NetworkHow relatives, children, spouses, parents, colleagues, and friends become part of the pressure chain.
- Feminist Activists: How Public Issues Are Rewritten As Order RisksHow gender equality, anti-harassment, anti-domestic violence, chained-woman outrage, and civic gatherings become political risk.
- Political Priorities in Financial Risk DisposalAnalyzing priorities among project completion, employment, institutional stability, and investor protection.
- Forced Disappearance: Why Power Makes A Person Temporarily VanishHow disappearance cuts off lawyers, family, media, and public attention, giving the state time without outside scrutiny.
- The Foreign Ministry and Overseas MissionsThe diplomatic system handles negotiation, consular work, information, and public diplomacy while carrying out centrally determined positions.
- CCP Foreign Policy and Global StrategyForeign policy, Taiwan, regional security, international organizations, and global messaging respond to external conditions and serve regime security, nationalism, and development.
- Timeline of CCP Foreign Policy and Taiwan StrategyA timeline of state founding, the UN seat, reform and opening, Taiwan policy, the Belt and Road, and security-centered diplomacy.
- Zhengzhou Foxconn Worker Protests: Labor Claims Overridden By StabilityHow pandemic control, labor arrangements, wage disputes, and police intervention converged in the Zhengzhou Foxconn protests.
- From Stability Maintenance To Social SilenceHow exemplary punishment, relational cost, and platform control turn silence into an everyday rational choice.
- Fukushima Wastewater And Nationalist MobilizationA case study of how environmental risk, scientific dispute, and nationalist emotion were narrativized around Fukushima wastewater.
- The Global South Narrative: Turning Development Ties Into Political RepresentationDevelopment, anti-colonial, and sovereignty language helps present bilateral ties as broader international representation.
- Grid Management: How Stability Maintenance Enters Everyday Community LifeHow grid workers, community police, building leaders, and data registers form a grassroots risk-detection system.
- Health-Code Function Creep: From Public Health Infrastructure to Stability ControlThe Henan red-code incident shows fractures among data purpose, administrative pressure, grassroots execution, and accountability.
- Henan Bank Depositors And Red Codes: Health Infrastructure As Stability ToolHow the Henan bank depositor red-code episode showed public-health infrastructure being used as a stability tool.
- The Hong Kong Garrison and Symbolic DeterrenceThe presence of the garrison, public exercises, and official statements can change political risk without direct street deployment.
- From Hong Kong To The National Security LawHong Kong's national security transformation shows how security narrative, legal rewriting, institutional entry, and stigma change institutional boundaries.
- How To Read Stability-Maintenance SignalsA reader's method for identifying stability responses through official language, police presence, platform shifts, and later summons.
- Human Rights Repression Map: From Cases to SystemA phase-one map for future case work on Xinjiang, Tibet, religion, feminism, labor, lawyers, and dissidents.
- Inspection System: How The Center Keeps Local Officials InsecureWhy inspection is not a normal audit but a channel for sending organizational fear into local governments and departments.
- The International Department and Party-to-Party DiplomacyThe International Department builds relationships with parties and political elites through channels distinct from state diplomacy.
- Influence in International OrganizationsThe CCP seeks agenda influence through diplomacy, development coalitions, personnel contests, and conceptual language.
- Administrative Governance of Mosques and Islamic ClergyVenue alteration, clergy credentials, scripture education, pilgrimage, halal labels, and deradicalization.
- Labor Rights: Wage Claims, Strikes, And Fear Of OrganizationWhy wage arrears, injuries, platform work, strikes, absent unions, and stability intervention turn labor rights into security issues.
- Counsel Access and Assigned Defense in National-Security CasesMeeting permission, lawyer choice, file access, secrecy, and pressure around guilty pleas.
- Lithuania and the Taiwan Representative OfficeThe naming dispute was followed by diplomatic downgrading and trade pressure, showing how Taiwan policy can enter supply-chain risk.
- Military Anti-Corruption: Purges in the Rocket Force and Equipment SystemPersonnel upheaval in the Rocket Force and equipment system joins procurement corruption, readiness credibility, and top-level control.
- Military Party Committees: Political Organization Inside CommandMilitary Party committees place major development, personnel, and political matters inside collective leadership and commander responsibility.
- Military Secrecy and Public AccountabilityMilitary secrecy has legitimate scope, but broad security language can obscure budgets, accidents, procurement, and personnel responsibility.
- The National Defense Mobilization System: Bringing Local Government Into War PreparationNational-defense mobilization connects personnel, transport, industry, health, communications, civil defense, and local administration.
- The Holistic National Security Concept: Expanding the Security BoundaryThe holistic national-security concept places political, economic, technological, cultural, social, cyber, and overseas interests in one security vocabulary.
- The National Supervisory Commission and the Discipline SystemThe merged discipline and supervision structure connects internal Party investigation with state supervisory power over public personnel.
- News Blackout: Why Human-Rights Events Are Made To Disappear FirstHow deletion, downranking, account bans, comment controls, unified scripts, and pressure on reporters remove public entrances to rights events.
- The National People's Congress: How Party Policy Enters State LawSeparating NPC constitutional authority, Party direction, drafting, voting, and implementation.
- Case: How Platforms Governed Pandemic Help InformationPandemic help posts connected patients and resources but faced rumor control, local-image concerns, and political risk.
- Timeline of Party Control Over the MilitaryA timeline of Party organization in the armed forces, CMC structures, debates over nationalization, reforms, and the chairman responsibility system.
- The Party-State Overseas Work ChainHow diplomacy, united-front absorption, overseas Chinese affairs, propaganda backflow, and security pressure connect.
- Petitioners: Why Complainants Become Governed ObjectsHow petitioning absorbs injustice, land seizures, demolition, corruption, and local violence into territorial responsibility.
- Source-Level Stability Control: Why Petitioners Are Stopped Before DepartureHow local governments use interception, community monitoring, hired guards, and responsibility systems to stop grievances from traveling upward.
- Loyalty Purges: How Anti-Corruption Reorders Military PowerMilitary anti-corruption addresses real corruption while affecting promotion networks, procurement ties, factional security, and top-leader authority.
- PLA Mobilization During Covid: Medical Support and Political DisplayPLA medical support had real public-health functions and was also used in narratives of organizational efficiency and institutional superiority.
- The CMC Political Work Department: Loyalty, Personnel, and Ideological ControlThe political-work system connects personnel, Party organization, propaganda education, and loyalty to military command.
- Platform-Police Cooperation: How Online Speech Becomes Offline RiskHow real-name systems, platform records, reports, cyber police, and local stations turn online speech into offline pressure.
- Pocket Crimes and Legal InstrumentalizationHow vague offenses create unpredictable speech risk.
- Police Big-Data Fusion Platforms: How Information Enters PolicingCross-database aggregation, risk tags, lead dispatch, grassroots checks, and feedback loops.
- Police, State Security, And Cyber Police: Division Of Labor In RepressionHow public security, state security, cyber police, and local stations divide work across order, political security, online speech, and offline enforcement.
- The Political-Legal Committee: Why Police, Courts, And Procuratorates Are Not IndependentHow the political-legal system connects police, courts, procuratorates, and stability maintenance under Party leadership.
- The Political-Legal Committee And The Stability Command ChainHow political-legal committees connect police, courts, procuratorates, judicial administration, and grassroots actors into a stability chain.
- Politicized Model Safety: Who Defines SafetyWhen ideological, national, and product safety merge, models can treat public discussion as risk.
- Group-Chat Censorship: Why Private Space Is Not Necessarily SafeGroup chats connect private relationships, platform monitoring, reporting, and offline identity into a traceable speech environment.
- The Interface Between Propaganda And Stability MaintenanceHow public opinion handling connects propaganda, deletion, police talks, local accountability, and risk lists.
- From Protest To Stability MaintenanceWhen rights defense becomes collective action, local authorities securitize the issue and activate political-legal, grassroots, workplace, and platform links.
- Why Public Mourning Becomes A Stability RiskHow public mourning, flowers, candles, and silence become collective memory and political risk.
- Skynet, Sharp Eyes, and the Public Video SystemConstruction, data interfaces, grassroots use, and the 2025 national regulation governing public video surveillance.
- Recommendation-Feed Censorship: What Appears Without A SearchRecommendation feeds decide what users encounter through candidate pools, account weight, and risk labels.
- Religious Freedom: How The CCP Turns Faith Into A Managed ObjectHow registration, venues, clergy, sermons, minors, online communication, and Sinicization turn faith into administration.
- How Responsibility Moves Downward Inside The CCP SystemHow the CCP system sends commands downward, moves blame downward, and leaves ordinary people bearing the cost.
- Human-Rights Repression Is Not Isolated: How Rights Claims Become Security RisksHow the CCP renames faith, identity, labor, legal defense, public oversight, and speech as security risks.
- Preserving Evidence Under Stability PressureHow to document talks, deletion, threats, and scene handling without increasing risk.
- Rights Lawyers: Why Legal Defense Is Treated As A Political ThreatWhy lawyers who connect cases, evidence, families, media, and institutional responsibility become a target.
- Timeline of Human-Rights Repression and Social ControlA timeline of labor camps, household and work-unit control, national-security law, ethnic and religious governance, RSDL, and digital surveillance.
- From Rights Defense To Stability Maintenance: How A Civic Claim Is Taken OverHow a complaint, report, gathering, or rights-defense action becomes a stability-maintenance task.
- RSDL: How a Legal Procedure Creates a Black-Box SpaceA sourced reconstruction of RSDL conditions, place, notice, counsel, and procuratorial oversight.
- China's Position on the Russia-Ukraine WarChina uses the language of sovereignty, ceasefire, anti-sanctions, and security concerns; actual policy must be checked through trade, diplomacy, and military ties.
- Sanctions and Countermeasures: National Security in Cross-Border BusinessCounter-sanctions, export controls, entity lists, and data rules turn diplomatic conflict into corporate compliance risk.
- Secret Trials: State Secrets, Public Access, and Defense LimitsClosed trial, secret evidence, judgments, family attendance, and verifiability.
- The Stability Machine: Manufacturing the Cost of SpeechA rewritten overview of selective punishment, vague offenses, family pressure, workplace pressure, and platform control.
- Sensitive-Period Control: Preventive Stability Maintenance Before Key DatesWhy major meetings, anniversaries, disaster dates, and public incidents trigger preventive stability control.
- Soft Detention and Sensitive-Period Control without Formal OrdersTracking, guards, forced travel, disconnection, escort, and family pressure as informal restriction.
- The South China Sea ArbitrationThe arbitration award, maritime enforcement, military construction, and historical-rights narratives continue to conflict.
- Maritime Militia in the South China Sea: Blurring Actors in the Gray ZoneOverlap among fishing vessels, local subsidies, coast guard, and naval activity creates ambiguity and deniability.
- The State Council Under Party LeadershipThe State Council manages national administration while major direction, personnel, and cross-agency coordination remain under centralized Party leadership.
- Timeline of Party-State Institutions and LawA timeline of constitutional change, administration, the political-legal system, supervision, and institutional reform.
- The State-Platform Interface: How Censorship Becomes Product RulesPlatforms are execution interfaces where regulatory demands become product rules, ranking, penalties, and user experience.
- Student Associations And Campus PressureHow student associations, consular contact, peer pressure, and university risk shape China-related discussion on campus.
- Summons, Warnings, And Administrative Punishment As Low-Cost ControlHow summons, warnings, fines, administrative detention, and phone inspection create real costs for ordinary people.
- The Taiwan Affairs System: Party, State, Military, and United-Front RolesThe Party center sets Taiwan policy while state, military, diplomatic, propaganda, and united-front bodies use different instruments.
- Taiwan Strait Exercises: Military Training as Political CoercionExercises around Taiwan serve training, deterrence, domestic mobilization, international signaling, and normalization of operations.
- Tea Talks And Warning Systems: Fear Without Formal ChargesHow informal police talks, warnings, written promises, and repeated visits create speech boundaries without formal charges.
- How Technical Censorship Converges With Propaganda, Repression, And Rights AbusesTechnical censorship supplies entrances, data, and forgetting mechanisms that connect propaganda, policing, and rights abuses.
- Forced Confessions: How Televised Confession Moves Trial Into PropagandaWhy televised confession is not ordinary reporting, but a political procedure that merges investigation, fear, humiliation, and public conviction.
- The Five Theater Commands: Reorganizing Joint Operational CommandThe theater-command reform separates service force-building from joint operational command and organizes readiness by strategic direction.
- Tibet: How Cultural Identity Enters National-Security NarrativeHow language, religion, education, reincarnation, exile communities, and cultural memory are placed inside national-unity and security governance.
- Tibetan Monasteries, Resident Cadres, and Grassroots Grid ControlVenue registration, monastic management, patriotic education, digital records, and community responsibility.
- Transnational Repression: How The CCP Exports Fear OverseasHow family pressure, passports, cross-border threats, bounties, community penetration, and information operations affect overseas dissent.
- Trending-List Governance: How Public Attention Is ScheduledTrending lists compress platform rules, commercial promotion, and political risk into a schedule of public attention.
- University Resilience: Protecting Academic Freedom From Political PressureTurning university resilience into governance, transparency, curriculum, community safety, and research-risk practice.
- Veteran Protests: When Military Identity Becomes a Stability TargetVeteran welfare claims touch military honor, local finance, organizational capacity, and social stability.
- Wartime Information Mobilization: Propaganda, Censorship, and Social OrganizationWar mobilization involves military information, public emotion, rumor control, platforms, and social resources.
- Wealth Control, Capital Flight, and Cross-Border Asset TransparencySeparating lawful diversification, control evasion, offshore concealment, and political-risk hedging.
- Case: The Information-Suppression Chain Around The White Paper ProtestsBlank paper, footage removal, account bans, and offline investigation show how online censorship connects to repression.
- After The White Paper Protests: Tracking And Retaliation After Street ExpressionHow identification, phone checks, later summons, and censorship formed the stability response after the White Paper protests.
- The WHO and Pandemic DiplomacyEarly information, WHO interaction, medical aid, and origin disputes jointly shaped China's international standing.
- Wolf-Warrior Diplomacy: Signaling to Domestic and Foreign AudiencesAssertive diplomatic language can deter external actors and demonstrate loyalty or nationalism at home.
- The Command Chain of Xinjiang's Integrated Joint Operations PlatformReconstructing IJOP from data collection and risk rules to police checking and detention consequences.
- Xinjiang Labor Transfers: How Employment Policy Creates Coercion RiskReal-name management, targets, training, company placement, on-site management, and the cost of refusal.
- Xinjiang Birth-Rate Decline and Evidence on Coercive Birth PreventionSeparating statistics, policy, medical measures, testimony, government explanation, and legal findings.
- Xinjiang: How Security Governance Becomes Collective ControlHow counterterrorism, anti-extremism, reeducation, labor transfer, family contact, and digital monitoring absorb group identity into security governance.
- From Xinjiang Governance To Social Control LaboratoryXinjiang shows how security logic can connect ethnicity, religion, surveillance technology, grassroots management, and reeducation narratives into a repressive system.
- Xinjiang VETCs: Counterterrorism Policy, Administrative Education, and DetentionSeparating the official vocational-training account, coercion evidence, criminal detention, and later transfer.
Cases
40- Belt and Road Debt RestructuringDebt problems in major projects involve borrower choices, policy banks, contractors, exchange rates, and domestic politics.
- The Sitong Bridge Slogan: How One Banner Triggered Citywide ControlHow the Sitong Bridge protest exposed the stability logic connecting sensitive periods, public space, keywords, and imitation risk.
- Zhang Zhan, Fang Bin, Chen Qiushi: How Public Documentation Was CriminalizedA case study of why documenting the early Wuhan outbreak was treated as public-order risk.
- The Early Rain Covenant Church Case: Unregistered Religion, Venue Enforcement, and National SecurityAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in The Early Rain Covenant Church Case: Unregistered Religion, Venue Enforcement, and National Security.
- Hong Kong National-Security Cases: How A Free City Was Institutionally Taken OverA case study of how national-security logic reshaped Hong Kong's media, assembly, elections, associations, and courts.
- The Ilham Tohti Case: Scholarship, Ethnic Policy, and Separatism ConvictionAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in The Ilham Tohti Case: Scholarship, Ethnic Policy, and Separatism Conviction.
- Labor And Feminist Activists: How Public Issues Became Order RisksA case study of how labor rights, gender equality, mutual support gatherings, and public discussion were recoded as subversion.
- Uyghur Scholars And Cultural Figures: How Identity Memory Was SecuritizedA case study of how scholarship, folklore, art, and cultural memory were recoded as national-security risk.
- The Chained Woman Case: Trafficked Women, Local Complicity, And Information ControlA case study of how local governance, bodily freedom, women's rights, trafficking chains, and information control failed together.
- The Yang Gailan Case: Poverty, Welfare Failure, And Local Responsibility ShiftingA case study of poverty relief, local governance, family distress, and public responsibility that became visible too late.
- The 1999 Falun Gong Ban: Political Decision, Legal Punishment, and Grave-Abuse AllegationsAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in The 1999 Falun Gong Ban: Political Decision, Legal Punishment, and Grave-Abuse Allegations.
- Coercive Enforcement in the One-Child Era: Targets, Fines, and Bodily ControlAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in Coercive Enforcement in the One-Child Era: Targets, Fines, and Bodily Control.
- Zhengzhou Foxconn Worker Protests: Labor Claims Overridden By StabilityHow pandemic control, labor arrangements, wage disputes, and police intervention converged in the Zhengzhou Foxconn protests.
- Fukushima Wastewater And Nationalist MobilizationA case study of how environmental risk, scientific dispute, and nationalist emotion were narrativized around Fukushima wastewater.
- Henan Bank Depositors and Red Codes: Public-Health Infrastructure Repurposed for Stability ControlAn officially confirmed health-code misuse case linking lists, system permissions, and grassroots restriction.
- The Hong Kong Garrison and Symbolic DeterrenceThe presence of the garrison, public exercises, and official statements can change political risk without direct street deployment.
- From Hong Kong To The National Security LawHong Kong's national security transformation shows how security narrative, legal rewriting, institutional entry, and stigma change institutional boundaries.
- Lithuania and the Taiwan Representative OfficeThe naming dispute was followed by diplomatic downgrading and trade pressure, showing how Taiwan policy can enter supply-chain risk.
- Military Anti-Corruption: Purges in the Rocket Force and Equipment SystemPersonnel upheaval in the Rocket Force and equipment system joins procurement corruption, readiness credibility, and top-level control.
- Case: How Platforms Governed Pandemic Help InformationPandemic help posts connected patients and resources but faced rumor control, local-image concerns, and political risk.
- Source-Level Stability Control: Why Petitioners Are Stopped Before DepartureHow local governments use interception, community monitoring, hired guards, and responsibility systems to stop grievances from traveling upward.
- PLA Mobilization During Covid: Medical Support and Political DisplayPLA medical support had real public-health functions and was also used in narratives of organizational efficiency and institutional superiority.
- Pocket-Crime SampleHow vague offenses create unpredictable punishment risk and expand self-censorship.
- From Protest To Stability MaintenanceWhen rights defense becomes collective action, local authorities securitize the issue and activate political-legal, grassroots, workplace, and platform links.
- Why Public Mourning Becomes A Stability RiskHow public mourning, flowers, candles, and silence become collective memory and political risk.
- China's Position on the Russia-Ukraine WarChina uses the language of sovereignty, ceasefire, anti-sanctions, and security concerns; actual policy must be checked through trade, diplomacy, and military ties.
- The South China Sea ArbitrationThe arbitration award, maritime enforcement, military construction, and historical-rights narratives continue to conflict.
- Maritime Militia in the South China Sea: Blurring Actors in the Gray ZoneOverlap among fishing vessels, local subsidies, coast guard, and naval activity creates ambiguity and deniability.
- Student Associations And Campus PressureHow student associations, consular contact, peer pressure, and university risk shape China-related discussion on campus.
- Taiwan Strait Exercises: Military Training as Political CoercionExercises around Taiwan serve training, deterrence, domestic mobilization, international signaling, and normalization of operations.
- Tibetan Residential Schools: Educational Access and Assimilation DisputeAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in Tibetan Residential Schools: Educational Access and Assimilation Dispute.
- Uyghur Child Separation: Parental Detention, Welfare Placement, and Boarding EducationAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in Uyghur Child Separation: Parental Detention, Welfare Placement, and Boarding Education.
- Veteran Protests: When Military Identity Becomes a Stability TargetVeteran welfare claims touch military honor, local finance, organizational capacity, and social stability.
- The White Paper Protest Suppression Chain: Removal, Identification, and Offline TracingReconstructing the online-offline connection through removal, identity leads, device checks, and later tracing.
- After The White Paper Protests: Tracking And Retaliation After Street ExpressionHow identification, phone checks, later summons, and censorship formed the stability response after the White Paper protests.
- The WHO and Pandemic DiplomacyEarly information, WHO interaction, medical aid, and origin disputes jointly shaped China's international standing.
- Xinjiang IJOP Risk Lists and the Detention ChainHow application fields, police checking, and the OHCHR assessment connect data labels to liberty.
- Xinjiang Labor Transfers: From Real-Name Registers to Factory ManagementAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in Xinjiang Labor Transfers: From Real-Name Registers to Factory Management.
- Xinjiang VETCs: Data Screening, Centralized Education, and Continuing ControlAn evidence-graded reconstruction of institutions, procedure, disputes, and consequences in Xinjiang VETCs: Data Screening, Centralized Education, and Continuing Control.
- The Zhang Zhan CaseCitizen reporting on Wuhan was reframed as public-order crime, turning independent memory into a warning to others.