• Let's Get Spiritual: State, Digital Spirituality and Feng Shui in China
    Feb 5 2025

    To welcome the Year of the Snake, we’re launching a new series looking at belief in China. Young Chinese people are increasingly turning to spirituality - even online manifestations of it - and feng shui, in this moment of high unemployment and economic stress. For a Party guided by materialism, this spike in spiritual interest presents a dilemma: how to regulate something you purport not to believe in. To discuss the state's use of spirituality from the Qing to now, we’re joined by Tristan Brown, a historian at MIT and author of Laws of the Land: Fengshui and the State in Qing Dynasty China and Haoyang Zhai, a researcher at the University of Melbourne.

    Image: “May The Snake Be With You” c/- Juliette Baxter

    Episode transcripts available at https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    47 mins
  • Sisters doing it for themselves? Marriage Refusal and Little Milk Puppies
    Jan 13 2025

    China is in the grip of a gender war. While government officials are texting and even cold calling women to urge them have children, the fertility rate continues to drop. Better educated and often better paid their male peers, many urban Chinese women are simply choosing not to marry. To discuss the growing female backlash to the Party’s pro-natal policies, Louisa and Graeme are joined by Chloe Mofei Shen, lifestyle director of Elle China and Qiqi Huang, post-doctoral fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies at the University of Macau.

    Image: “Marrying late has many advantages”, BG E15/716, Landsberger Collection, 1975.

    Show transcripts available at https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    44 mins
  • Give me Maw: China's Craze for the Cocaine of the Seas
    Dec 10 2024

    Few outside the Chinese wedding banquet circuit have heard of fish maw, a flavourless, unappetising-looking swim bladder found in bony fish. In dried form, a kilo from the right species goes for around $150,000 on the world market, double the price of a kilogram of cocaine. The most prized maw is found in one of the remotest corners of the planet, the Kikori Delta in southern Papua New Guinea, where the once ignored scaly croaker is being targeted on an industrial scale by Chinese fishing companies, transforming the lives of villagers—and the ecosystem. Louisa and Graeme are joined by Jo Chandler, an award-winning journalist and senior lecturer at the University of Melbourne’s Centre for Advancing Journalism who reported on the fish maw trade for Nature magazine.

    Image: c/- Jo Chandler, Veraibari Village 2024.

    Jo’s fieldwork was supported in part by the Walkley Foundation Sean Dorney Grant for Pacific Journalism.

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    43 mins
  • The Centre of the Vortex: Survivors' Notes from Hong Kong Writers
    Nov 8 2024

    Writers from Hong Kong face a Kafkaesque decision in the years since draconian security legislation was imposed on the city: to stay and be subject to intense censorship, or to write freely from exile. In this episode, Louisa speaks to two award-winning authors who have chosen different paths. Lau Yeewa is still living in Hong Kong; her book Tongueless, translated by Jennifer Feeley, won the 2024 Pen Translates award. Gigi Leung Lee-chi is now based in Taiwan, and her book The Melancholy of Trees has just won Taiwan's Golden Tripod award.

    Image: c/- Wikimedia Commons, Empty Bookshelves, 2014

    Transcripts available at https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    41 mins
  • Special Criminal Zones: China’s Pig Butchers Pivot to the West
    Oct 2 2024

    In our third episode on pig butchering scams, we explore the origins of the Chinese criminal syndicates that enslave people from at least 66 different countries. We examine the institutions supporting this appalling business, from the Thai military to cryptocurrencies, Burmese border guard forces to special economic zones. And the marks for these scam syndicates are not just Chinese lonely hearts—Western countries are now more profitable to scam than China. To ask what can be done to counter this trade, Graeme is joined by Jason Tower, director of the Burma Program at the United States Institute of Peace, and Greg Raymond from the ANU’s Strategic and Defence Studies Centre.

    Image: c/- Stefan Czimmek/DW, KK Park on the Myanmar-Thai border

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    48 mins
  • Cognitive hazing: The Disinformation War on Taiwan?
    Aug 31 2024

    Taiwan is ground zero for cognitive warfare, with the island subject to more disinformation than any other democracy. The targets are political candidates, media outlets, even boy bands. The threat is so serious that Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice recently set up a Cognitive Warfare Research Center. To explore this war for Taiwanese minds, Louisa and Graeme are joined by independent writer Min Chao and journalist Brian Hioe from New Bloom Magazine.

    Image: Taiwan News Formosa TV, YouTube, 20 January 2024.

    Transcripts available at: https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    44 mins
  • The Pig Butcher’s Payroll: Inside a Romance Scam
    Jul 24 2024

    After our last episode on an online romance scam operating out of Palau we were contacted by Neo Lu, who was trafficked to work in an online scam camp on the Myanmar-Thailand border, the victim of a $US3 trillion global criminal industry. He joins Louisa and Graeme to offer jaw-dropping detail on life inside a scam centre, the mechanics of pig butchering, who benefits from this new form of slavery and how they launder their profits.

    Image: c/- Yihao Lu, Scamming equipment, Dongmei Camp, 2022

    Episode transcripts are available at https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    49 mins
  • Fraud Factories and Pig Butchery: Chinese Triads go Pacific
    Jun 12 2024

    Chinese triads have been making a Pacific play, notably in the tiny nation of Palau. There a notorious triad boss - nicknamed Broken Tooth - reinvented himself as a CCP-linked businessman trying to set up a 'gangster-themed' casino, while police busted a Chinese 'fraud factory'. In Palau, this scam scheme was linked to businessmen touting United Front credentials, who are also involved in local politics and media outlets. To examine the ties between Chinese gangsters and the Communist Party, Louisa and Graeme are joined by Aubrey Belford, the lead Pacific editor for the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, and freelance journalist Bernadette Carreon.

    Image: Downtown Koror, Palau’s largest town. Image c/- Richard Brooks

    Transcripts available at https://www.thechinastory.org/lrp/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    47 mins