Forum told cities need to be more resilient 20:49 UTC+8, 2020-12-31 0
Urban management experts say COVID-19 has been a test for all cities and only with resilience can people recover from the impact of 2020. 20:49 UTC+8, 2020-12-31 0
Wang Dezhong, president of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, delivers a speech at the “Urban management amid the pandemic” forum.
The impact of 2020 could last for many years and people need to heed the changes taking place in their communities and change with them to create a better place to live and work, experts told a forum focused on urban management in Japan and China.
Experts share tips on running cities during pandemic By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2020-12-27 00:00 Social experts and professors from Shanghai and several cities in Japan exchanged best practices in urban governance under the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic during a conference on Saturday. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
Experts and academics from Shanghai and several Japanese cities exchanged their best practices in urban governance in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic during a conference on Saturday.
Scholars from the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, known as the SASS, shared Shanghai s approaches and suggestions from different perspectives. Their counterparts from Japanese cities, including Tokyo and Kyoto, joined via video linkup.
International Forum on New Inclusive Asia 2020 held
December 17, 2020
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan: The International Forum on New Inclusive Asia 2020 was held on Thursday under the theme “BRI- Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic changing reality and the way forward”.
The Forum was co-organized by the Islamabad-based Center for Global & Strategic Studies (CGSS), Malaysia’s Center for New Inclusive Asia, and Sri Lanka’s Verite Research Strategic Analysis in partnership with the Institute of the Belt and Road Initiative, Tsinghua University.
The Forum was supported by BRSN, the official international network of more than 100 BRI think tanks worldwide.
A panel of 16 distinguished experts/scholars from eight Countries participated at IFNIA 2020 including Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Maldives, China, Japan, Thailand, and Bangladesh.
Inspired by inclusive family planning policy, young Chinese expect a fertility-friendly society
By Li Qiao and Huang Lanlan Source: Global Times Published: 2020/12/15 21:43:40
Parents holding their children play in the square of a residential community in Nanjing, capital of East China s Jiangsu Province. Photo: VCG
After having two daughters, 43-year-old father Yu Zhongquan in Dalian, Northeast China s Liaoning Province, welcomed his third son in July.
It is just better to have both girls and boys in my family, he told the Global Times, emphasizing that he loves his daughters very much. Our family s economic condition can support more children. Although breaking the second-child policy, my wife and I also wanted a third kid, so we have him, Yu said.
Loyal members of the Chinese Communist Party have infiltrated Australia s Shanghai consulate after being hired through a state-owned recruitment agency, a new leak suggests.
The shocking revelation came after the extraordinary leak of a database of 1.95 million registered Chinese Communist Party members.
The unprecedented data release, believed to be the first of its kind, has revealed how Beijing s influence has stretched into every corner of Western governments, defence firms, banks and pharmaceutical giants.
The data was extracted from a Shanghai server by Chinese dissidents in 2016.
Australia s Consulate-General Shanghai has hired Chinese Communist Party members on the recommendation of state-owned hiring agency Shanghai Foreign Agency Service Department