
Amy Qin
National Correspondent at The New York Times
National Correspondent for @NYTimes, covering Asian American communities. Past lives in Beijing, Taipei & Hong Kong. Email [email protected] or DM for Signal
Articles
-
1 month ago |
sanjuandailystar.com | Amy Qin |Ana Swanson
By Amy Qin and Ana SwansonThe chemistry professor’s nightmare seemed to finally be over. Five years had passed since Feng Tao, also known as Franklin, was led by FBI agents out of his home in Lawrence, Kansas. The first professor to be arrested under a Trump-era program aimed at fighting Chinese economic espionage, Tao was accused of hiding his ties to a Chinese university while conducting federally funded research at the University of Kansas, where he was tenured. In July, he won his legal fight.
-
1 month ago |
nytimes.com | Amy Qin |Ana Swanson
The chemistry professor's nightmare seemed to finally be over. Five years had passed since Feng Tao, also known as Franklin, was led by F.B.I. agents out of his home in Lawrence, Kansas. The first professor to be arrested under a Trump-era program aimed at fighting Chinese economic espionage, Dr. Tao was accused of hiding his ties to a Chinese university while conducting federally funded research at the University of Kansas, where he was tenured. In July, he won his legal fight.
-
2 months ago |
elespectador.com | Amy Qin
na bandera estadounidense ondea frente a la Corte Suprema de Estados Unidos en Washington D. C., EE. UU., el 15 de enero de 2025. Audio generado con IA de GoogleEn agosto de 1895, un joven cocinero llamado Wong Kim Ark estaba a punto de desembarcar del SS Coptic, tras un largo viaje a San Francisco desde China, cuando los funcionarios de aduanas estadounidenses le negaron la entrada. Dijeron que no era ciudadano estadounidense.
-
2 months ago |
diario.mx | Amy Qin
En agosto de 1895, un joven cocinero llamado Wong Kim Ark estaba a punto de desembarcar del SS Coptic, después de un largo viaje de regreso a San Francisco desde China, cuando los funcionarios de Aduanas de Estados Unidos le negaron el reingreso. No era ciudadano estadounidense, dijeron. No importaba que Wong hubiera nacido en el Barrio Chino de San Francisco, no lejos del puerto donde ahora estaba detenido.
-
2 months ago |
spokesman.com | Amy Qin
In August 1895, a young cook named Wong Kim Ark was about to disembark from the SS Coptic, after a long journey home to San Francisco from China, when U.S. customs officials denied him re-entry. He was not a U.S. citizen, they said. Never mind that Wong had been born in San Francisco’s Chinatown, not far from the port where he was now being held.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →Coverage map
X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 57K
- Tweets
- 5K
- DMs Open
- Yes

RT @ewong: Join me Wed. at Harvard @FairbankCenter for a talk on my new book #AtTheEdgeOfEmpire and China's control of frontiers and nation…

"Researchers say the emergence of Ms. Sun’s case risks trapping the [Chinese] diaspora between a suspicious American public and Beijing’s desire to drive a wedge between ethnic Chinese and their adopted homes." by @dhpierson https://t.co/2IpfVKqV78

RT @MeetThePress: WATCH: Far-right activist Laura Loomer said in a social media post that the “White House will smell like curry” if Kamala…