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Tough Times for China's Internet Human Rights Activists. Xu Jianxin.

by Jianxin, Xu; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 44Human Relations. Publisher: China Rights Forum, 2005ISSN: 1522-3248;.Subject(s): Communist Party (China) | Democracy -- China | Freedom of speech | Hactivism | Human rights -- China | Internet -- Political useDDC classification: 050 Summary: "Internet activism on behalf of human rights in China is under pressure from all sides, with the difficulties inherent in collective action serving to exacerbate the predicament." (CHINA RIGHTS FORUM) The author discusses how human rights "activists who take advantage of the Internet's potential are increasingly finding themselves exposed to official persecution and the law of diminished returns."
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REF SIRS 2006 Human Relations Article 43 US Businesses Fret over Unocal Cases. REF SIRS 2006 Human Relations Article 43 Big Win for Human Rights. REF SIRS 2006 Human Relations Article 44 Chinese Whispers. REF SIRS 2006 Human Relations Article 44 Tough Times for China's Internet Human Rights Activists. REF SIRS 2006 Human Relations Article 45 Abduction of Innocents. REF SIRS 2006 Human Relations Article 46 The Children of War. REF SIRS 2006 Human Relations Article 46 Child Soldiers: Changing a Culture of Violence.

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.

Originally Published: Tough Times for China's Internet Human Rights Activists, No. 1, 2005; pp. 67-69.

"Internet activism on behalf of human rights in China is under pressure from all sides, with the difficulties inherent in collective action serving to exacerbate the predicament." (CHINA RIGHTS FORUM) The author discusses how human rights "activists who take advantage of the Internet's potential are increasingly finding themselves exposed to official persecution and the law of diminished returns."

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