
Jenny Cai
Articles
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2 months ago |
abc.net.au | Angelica Silva |Jenny Cai
In some cultures, your surname is viewed as your family's history and legacy. Not changing hers meant honouring this, says Canberra woman Yimin Qiang. "I won't change my last name after I get married," the 27-year-old told the ABC. "My reasons are simple: I was born and raised in China and identify entirely as Chinese, even though I'm living in Australia now."Ms Qiang and her Anglo-Australian fiance are planning to get married next year.
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Jan 5, 2025 |
abc.net.au | Jenny Cai
中国问题研究学者王耀麟(Mark Wang)至今仍记得,在2000年代,澳大利亚的中国研究曾一度充满活力,处于世界领先地位。 王教授是墨尔本大学当代中国研究中心(Centre for Contemporary Chinese Studies)主任,他说:“当时,澳大利亚学生对中国研究的兴趣、政府对中国研究的政策以及对中国研究的资助都非常高。 “澳大利亚的大学曾经聘请过很多像我这样与中国有关的专家,研究和教授有关中国的专业知识。 “我曾经[有经费]每年带几十个学生去中国,参观城市和乡村,结识很多中国老百姓。” 但王教授说,澳大利亚的中国研究目前正处于严峻的形势之中。 今年5月,60名中国问题研究学者联名发表公开信,警告联邦政府的最高级别非医学研究资助机构——澳大利亚研究理事会(Australian Research Council,ARC),澳大利亚的中国问题研究状况已经到了“危机关头”。 信中引用了一份由政府资助的关于澳大利亚中国知识能力的报告,该报告发现澳大利亚研究理事会资助的与中国相关的研究项目在十多年间急剧下降,2023年没有任何项目获得资助。...
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Jan 3, 2025 |
johnmenadue.com | Jenny Cai
China scholar Mark Wang still remembers a time in the 2000s when Australia’s China studies was vibrant and in a leading position in the world. “At that time, the student interest, government policy and funding for China studies in Australia were really strong,” said Professor Wang, the director of the University of Melbourne’s Centre for Contemporary Chinese Studies.
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Jan 2, 2025 |
abc.net.au | Jenny Cai
China scholar Mark Wang still remembers a time in the 2000s when Australia's China studies was vibrant and in a leading position in the world. "At that time, the student interest, government policy and funding for China studies in Australia were really strong," said Professor Wang, the director of the University of Melbourne's Centre for Contemporary Chinese Studies.
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Nov 15, 2024 |
abc.net.au | Angelica Silva |Jenny Cai
Amara's mother refused to believe she had "any real worth" unless she got married. "My ambition was never a priority to her, only marriage," the 30-year-old from Sydney, who asked to use a pseudonym, told the ABC. Amara, who is Indian Australian, described her relationship with her mother as "estranged". The reason? Her mother was the target of intense "gender disappointment" — and so was Amara.
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