Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet

In 1994, at a meeting known as the Third Forum on Tibet Work, the Chinese authorities announced a series of restrictions on religious practice in the Tibetan Autonomous Region. Described by many outsiders in terms of abuses of rights, in fact those measures differed in important ways. By analysing t...

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Main Author: Robert Barnett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-01-01
Series:Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
Subjects:
300
Online Access:http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/575
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spelling doaj-2e75cb43e281435b9ccdac5b4e8dfeab2020-11-25T03:51:58ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Current Chinese Affairs1868-10261868-48742012-01-0141445107Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in TibetRobert BarnettIn 1994, at a meeting known as the Third Forum on Tibet Work, the Chinese authorities announced a series of restrictions on religious practice in the Tibetan Autonomous Region. Described by many outsiders in terms of abuses of rights, in fact those measures differed in important ways. By analysing the target, rationale and procedure of these restrictions, it becomes clear that some were relatively routine, while others were anomalous – their purpose was not explained by officials, the source of their authority was not clear, or the restrictions were simply not admitted to at all. These anomalous orders can be linked to major changes in underlying discourses of modernization and development among officials in Tibet at the time. They reflected undeclared shifts in attitudes to religion and cultural difference, and seeded the dramatic worsening in state–society relations that has taken place in Tibetan areas since that time.http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/575Social sciencesTibetdevelopmentmodernizationreligionChen KuiyuanThird Forumanomalies300TibetContemporary
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Barnett
spellingShingle Robert Barnett
Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
Social sciences
Tibet
development
modernization
religion
Chen Kuiyuan
Third Forum
anomalies
300
Tibet
Contemporary
author_facet Robert Barnett
author_sort Robert Barnett
title Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet
title_short Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet
title_full Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet
title_fullStr Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet
title_full_unstemmed Restrictions and Their Anomalies:The Third Forum and the Regulation of Religion in Tibet
title_sort restrictions and their anomalies:the third forum and the regulation of religion in tibet
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
issn 1868-1026
1868-4874
publishDate 2012-01-01
description In 1994, at a meeting known as the Third Forum on Tibet Work, the Chinese authorities announced a series of restrictions on religious practice in the Tibetan Autonomous Region. Described by many outsiders in terms of abuses of rights, in fact those measures differed in important ways. By analysing the target, rationale and procedure of these restrictions, it becomes clear that some were relatively routine, while others were anomalous – their purpose was not explained by officials, the source of their authority was not clear, or the restrictions were simply not admitted to at all. These anomalous orders can be linked to major changes in underlying discourses of modernization and development among officials in Tibet at the time. They reflected undeclared shifts in attitudes to religion and cultural difference, and seeded the dramatic worsening in state–society relations that has taken place in Tibetan areas since that time.
topic Social sciences
Tibet
development
modernization
religion
Chen Kuiyuan
Third Forum
anomalies
300
Tibet
Contemporary
url http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/575
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