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SINO-CANADIAN RELATIONS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   160782


Agriculture and Sino-Canadian relations: hsieh pei-chi and his farmers program / Sinclair, Paul ; Blachford, Dongyan Ru   Journal Article
Sinclair, Paul Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article discusses the intermediary activities of Hsieh Pei-chi, a Shandong-born, Taiwan- and U.S.-educated historian active in Canada's main agricultural province of Saskatchewan. We focus on a China Farmers Program, a project jointly implemented by China's Ministries of Agricultural Machinery (農業機械部 Nongye jixiebu) and Land Reclamation (農墾部 Nongkenbu) and the Province of Saskatchewan during the early 1980s. The study carefully examines the intermediary, broker role played by Hsieh in the complex negotiations between Chinese ministries and a regional Canadian government. Drawing on Fei Xiaotong's research on rural Chinese society and the historical record of Chinese intermediary activities, the article reflects on the role and significance of the Chinese zhongjianren (中間人 intermediary) in China's modern interaction with overseas partners.
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2
ID:   124731


Family reunification as international history: rethinking Sino-Canadian relations after 1970 / Madokoro, Laura   Journal Article
Madokoro, Laura Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Building on the emerging scholarship that treats the history of global migration as a crucial aspect of international history, this article examines the little known 1973 family reunification agreement between Canada and the People's Republic of China. The article contends that, despite its limitations, the agreement was an important milestone in the history of Sino-Canadian relations. Through a detailed micro-history, the article reveals the shifting political currents that led to the agreement's successful negotiation, highlighting how, by the early 1970s, Canada and other Western nations were embracing the notion of family reunification as an important human rights issue in the ongoing contests of the global Cold War.
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