The story of a garment worker who set a factory on fire to protest unpaid wages has become a proxy for Chinese netizens to discuss the U.S.-China trade war, labor rights, and the lack of alternatives for ordinary people to resolve disputes; international students at Harvard were blindsided by Trump's new ban; and a new AI surveillance tool from the Chinese Ministry of State Security has collected more than 30 billion Telegram messages.
Share this post
HRIC Weekly Brief
Share this post
The story of a garment worker who set a factory on fire to protest unpaid wages has become a proxy for Chinese netizens to discuss the U.S.-China trade war, labor rights, and the lack of alternatives for ordinary people to resolve disputes; international students at Harvard were blindsided by Trump's new ban; and a new AI surveillance tool from the Chinese Ministry of State Security has collected more than 30 billion Telegram messages.