Issue: ‘Civil Society: 85/2, 2008’

Civil Society on the Rise

By Beate Engelen
When my husband and I first became involved with Amity as teachers in a small college in Shandong four years ago, we found that many of our students were interested in some kind of voluntary work. They wanted to do something for elderly people, disabled children or the environment. What really impressed them [...]

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Relationships in a World Turned Cold – Civil Society in China

By Li Xue
“Sir, can you tell me why these people do not allow a stranger into their homes to warm his hands? Look at the bright windows. Their fires must be huge.”
The bus is rumbling up. I hastily withdraw my hand from his and shout: “It’s because these people are more civilized than the mountain [...]

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Bilingual Deaf Education Takes Root in China

by Li Xue
Replanting a potted plant is a long and tedious process. In his book, “Mirror of Flowers”, the 17th century horticulturist Chen Haozi recorded minutely what it takes to do it right: choosing the right environment, pruning, replacing the soil and watering the plant. Only if the replanting process is done with the utmost [...]

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Home of Blessings Bakery: Happy Bread Angels

Amity’s Home of Blessings has opened a bakery as a vocational training institution for developmentally disabled people. Giving them an opportunity to work in a real-life workplace has improved the lives of people with Down syndrome – and those of their customers. By Xin Yisheng
30-year-old Zhou Jian from Nanjing has just mastered the first vocational [...]

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Field Trip Experience: Who Cares?

An Amity volunteer dares to look at social reality a world apart from her own comfortable city life. By Wang Ying
At the end of December last year, I took part in an activity organized by the Amity Foundation. We went on a field trip to interview orphans who live in northern Jiangsu, not far from [...]

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Invoking the Spirit of Giving – Challenges of Chinese Nonprofit Organizations

By Zhong Xin
A big challenge for China’s nonprofit organizations (NPOs) today is how to deal with their lack of funding. There are three different main sources of their income: government subsidies, membership fees and public donations. A nationwide survey on NPOs compiled by Tsinghua University in 1998 found that only 2.2% of their financing comes [...]

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Farmers United: the Wulate Potato Association

Traveling to Inner Mongolia in April 2008, Beate Engelen visited an independent farmers’ association.
What is so special about the “Potato Association” in the Inner Mongolian county of Wulate Middle Banner? Farmers in this area usually sell their potatoes to a factory through a middleman who arranges everything related to the business transactions between the farmers [...]

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