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Skip to main content Laogai Research Foundation Search HOMEWHAT IS LAOGAINEWS & VIEWSLRF COMMENTARIESEVENTSISSUESPUBLICATIONSDIGITIZED ARCHIVESABOUT US Event Laogai Museum RelocatingThe Laogai Museum, the only museum in the United States solely dedicated to promoting human rights and exposing Communist Party persecution in the People’s Republic of China, is moving to a new location within the historic DuPont Circle neighborhood. The new location of the Museum will be at 1901 18th Street... Reports Criminalizing Dissent: A Comparative Study of Chinese and Cuban Revolutionary Repression, 1949-1979 “Criminalizing Dissent” is a historical report highlighting the exceedingly parallel histories of China and Cuba from 1949-1979. In addition to comparing the development of the revolutionary... Publications Bitter Winds: A Memoir of My Years in China’s Gulag In April 1960 Chinese Communist authorities arrested Harry Wu. The son of a well-to-do Shanghai banker, he was cast into a Laogai prison labor camp. Though never formally charged or tried, he spent the next 19 years in a hellish... News & Views Which China won the War against Japan?An infographic challenging the CCP's historical erasure of Nationalist participation in World War II. Where are They Now? Searching for the Detained Human Rights LawyersAn infographic examining the whereabouts of the detained lawyers and the implications of their prolonged criminal detention without charges. What's wrong with China's proposed Criminal Law amendments?An infographic examining the implications of the recent draft of the 9th Amendments to the Criminal Law, which will drastically limit freedom of speech, tighten censorship, and increase minority suppression. Commentaries Announcing Peace, Enforcing Violence: Xi Jinping's V-Day SpeechDecoding the historical revisionism in the V-Day parade, and understanding the implications of Xi Jinping's proposed military scaleback. If History Teaches Us Anything, Don’t Bet on Beijing: Chinese Human Rights and the Beijing OlympicsIn the summer of 2001, shortly after Beijing won the bid for the 2008 summer Olympics, Chinese Minister of Sport Yuan Weimin stated that the Olympics and would bring “progress in human rights causes.” Mr. Yuan was not alone in his unbridled optimism. François Carrard, the Executive Director of the International Olympic Committee, betted that rewarding China with the games would improve its human rights situation: “Bet on the fact that in the coming seven years, openness, progress, and... A Thinly-Veiled Political Stunt: the Return of Ai Wei Wei’s Passport in the Midst of a CrackdownFamed Chinese artist and political critic Ai Weiwei had his passport returned to him by the Chinese government after it was confiscated four years ago. Ai had his passport confiscated by the Chinese government in 2011 while attempting to travel to Hong Kong amidst a roundup of political activists. In addition to the confiscation, Ai was detained for 81
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