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episode 24: Höchste Kameradichte der Welt


 

Abstract:

Auch in der deutschen Medienlandschaft wird immer mehr über die prekäre Situation der Uigur*innen in Xinjiang berichtet. Wir sehen Bilder von Schulen, die eher an Gefängnisse erinnern und hören Interviews mit Zeug*innen, die Schlimmstes berichten. Florian Frenzel hat sich in seiner Masterarbeit näher mit diesen Umständen beschäftigt. Dabei wollte er herausfinden, wie das neue Großprojekt Chinas, die neue Seidenstraße, damit zusammenhängt. Was er alles über die vorherrschenden Maßnahmen und Motivationen Chinas herausgearbeitet hat, erfahrt ihr in dieser Folge vom Podcast.

 

Links:

John Sudworth/BBC (6/2019): Inside China’s ‚thought transformation‘ camps

Robin Barnwell/WDR (9/2020): Undercover in China – Die Unterdrückung der Uiguren

Isobel Yeung/Vice (6/2019): China’s Vanishing Muslims: Undercover In The Most Dystopian Place In The World

Literatur:

Frenzel, Florian (2020): The Belt and Road Initiative: A Driver for Securitization in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region?

Balzacq, Thierry (2005): The Three Faces of Securitization: Political Agency, Audience and Context. In European Journal of International Relations 11(2), 171-201.

Bovingdon, Gardner (2010): The Uyghurs: Strangers in Their Own Land. New York, Chichester: Columbia University Press.

Buzan, Barry / Wæver, Ole / de Wilde, Jaap (1998): Security. A New Framework for Analysis. Boulder, London: Lynne Rienner Publisher.

Castets, Rémi (2003): The Uyghurs in Xinjiang – The Malaise Grows. In China Perspectives 49, 1-22.

Chestnut Greitens, Sheena / Myunghee, Lee / Yazici, Emir (2020): Counterterrorism and Preventive Repression: China’s Changing Strategy in Xinjiang. In International Security 44(3), 9-47.

Chung, Chien-peng (2019): China’s Uyghur Problem: Terrorist Acts and Government Responses. In Schreer, Benjamin / Tan, Andrew (Hg.) Terrorism and Insurgency in Asia: A Contemporary Examination of Terrorist and Separatist Movements. Milton Park, New York: Routledge, 119-132.

Clarke, Michael (2008): China’s “War on Terror” in Xinjiang: Human Security and the Causes of Violent Uighur Separatism. In Terrorism and Political Violence 20(2), 271-301.

–– (2007): China’s Internal Security Dilemma and the “Great Western Development”: The Dynamics of Integration, Ethnic Nationalism and Terrorism in Xinjiang. In Asian Studies Review 31(3), 323-342.

Dooley, Connor W. (2019): Silencing Xinjiang: The Chinese Government’s Campaign Against the Uyghurs. In Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law 48(1), 233-272.

Gladney, Dru (2018): The Party-State’s Nationalist Strategy to Control the Uyghurs: Silenced Voices. In Wo-Lap Lam, Willy (Hg.) Routledge Handbook of the Chinese Communist Party. Milton Park, New York: Routledge, 984-1045.

Hasmath, Reza (2011): Managing China’s Muslim Minorities: Migration, Labor and the Rise of Ethnoreligious Consciousness Among Uyghurs in Urban Xinjiang. In Barbalet, Jack / Possamai, Adam / Turner, Bryan S. (Hg.) Religion and the State: A Comparative Sociology. London, New York: Anthem Press, 121-137.

Hayes, Anna (2019): Interwoven ‘Destinies’: The Significance of Xinjiang to the China Dream, the Belt and Road Initiative, and the Xi Jinping Legacy. In Journal of Contemporary China 29(121), 31-45.

He, Baogang (2019): The Domestic Politics of the Belt and Road Initiative and its Implications. In Journal of Contemporary China 28(116), 180-195.

Leibold, James (2019): Surveillance in China’s Xinjiang Region: Ethnic Sorting, Coercion, and Inducement. In Journal of Contemporary China 29(121), 46-60.

Mackerras, Colin (2015): Xinjiang in China’s Foreign Relations: Part of a New Silk Road or Central Asian Zone of Conflict? In East Asia 32(1), 25-42.

Millward, James (2007): Eurasian Crossroads: A History of Xinjiang. New York: Columbia University Press.

Roberts, Sean (2018): The Biopolitics of China’s “War on Terror” and the Exclusion of the Uyghurs. In Critical Asian Studies 50(2), 232-258.

Smith Finley, Joanne (2019): Securitization, Insecurity and Conflict in Contemporary Xinjiang: Has PRC Counter-Terrorism Evolved into State Terror? In Central Asian Survey 38(1), 1-26.

The Wang Lixiong Prophecy: ‘Palestinization’ in Xinjiang and the Consequences of Chinese State Securitization of Religion. In Central Asian Survey 38(1), 81-101.

Theiler, Tobias (2003): Societal Security and Social Psychology. In Review of International Studies 29(2), 249-268.

Trédaniel, Marie / Lee, Pak K. (2017): Explaining the Chinese Framing of the “Terrorist” Violence in Xinjiang: Insights from Securitization Theory. In Nationalities Papers 46(1), 177-195.

Vuori, Juha A. (2008): Illocutionary Logic and Strands of Securitization: Applying the Theory of Securitization to the Study of Non-Democratic Political Orders. In European Journal of International Relations 14(1), 65-99.

Zenz, Adrian (2020): Sterilization, IUDs, and Mandatory Birth Control: The CCP’s Campaign to Suppress Uyghur Birthrates in Xinjiang. Erhältlich im Internet: <https://jamestown.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Zenz-Internment-Sterilizations-and-IUDs-UPDATED-July-21-Rev2.pdf?x94369> (besucht am 26.07.2020).

‚Thoroughly Reforming Them Towards a Healthy Heart Attitude`: China’s Political Re-Education Campaign in Xinjiang. In Central Asian Survey 38(1), 102-128.

Zenz, Adrian / Leibold, James (2020): Securitizing Xinjiang: Police Recruitment, Informal Policing and Ethnic Minority Co-optation. In The China Quarterly 242, 324-348.

Zu Gast:

Florian Frenzel


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 December 24, 2020  1h43m