Monday, January 24, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: Xinjiang Review - Electronic journal and Forum WWW

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Monday, January 24, 2011 10:15 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Xinjiang Review - Electronic journal and Forum WWW


> H-ASIA
> January 23. 2011
>
> WWW Resource: Xinjiang Review - Electronic journal and Forum
> ************************************************************************
> From: Reviews of Internet resources for Asian Studies
> <asia-www-monitor@anu.edu.au>
>
> The Asian Studies WWW Monitor: Jan 2011, Vol. 18, No. 1 (320)
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> 21 Jan 2011
>
> Xinjiang Review - Electronic journal and Forum
>
> Xinjiang Review, Washington, DC, USA.
>
> Supplied-note:
> "For submission of articles, registration, subscription, publication,
> and donation, Please contact xinjiangreview.com via
> xinjiangreview@gmail.com
> Please follow xinjiangreview.com on twitter.com for updates.
>
> "The terminology of 'Xinjiang' (New Territory, New Region, or New
> Dominion) reflects the Qing expansion and imperialism in 18th century
> Central Asia, while 'East Turkistan Republic' (or East Turkistan
> Islamic Republic) attempts to cover the nature of various Uyghur
> nationalistic movements in the early 20th century against the
> Manchu-Chinese Empire. These highly politicized geographic
> terminologies reveal the dynamics and developments of the region in
> politics, ethnicity, and societies and in many ways highlight
> different ways of thinking about Xinjiang history and its future
> destiny. It is only for the purpose of convenience and consistency
> that this website/E-journal deploys the popular term 'Xinjiang'
> referring to this highly contested region of Central Asia. To use
> 'Xinjiang' also implies that the chronology spans from the Qing
> dynasty, when the region became the Qing's new dominion, to the
> present, in which disputes and conflicts over the legitimate status
> of the region between China and local Uyghurs still remain.
>
> Xinjiang Review is [...] run by independent scholars headquartered in
> Washington, D.C. It is a non-governmental and non-profit forum. All
> opinions and views expressed on this forum/E-journal only represent
> writers' own arguments and judgments. The website welcomes
> good-willed donation from members for hosting and maintaining the
> web. Interested donors please contact? Xinjiangreview@gmail.com -
> xinjiangreview."
>
> Self-description:
> "Forum Description: Xinjiang has again become the pivot of China,
> Central Asia, and even the world in this century in terms of
> political significance and security arrangements in Central Asia.
> Scholars and observers from surrounding countries and beyond have
> begun to invest unprecedented efforts to illuminate the nature of
> historical and contemporary events there. However, due to various
> historical, linguistic, political, and academic traditions and
> taboos, studies on Xinjiang are highly fragmented and biased among
> ethnic and national lines. [...] Xinjiang Review is founded exactly
> in such context as a platform for concerned Xinjiang scholars of
> various disciplines, regions, and nationalities. It especially
> welcomes Uyghur and Han scholars from Xinjiang and China proper to
> contribute insights and exchange perspectives."
>
> Site contents:
> * Introduction (About Us, About Xinjiang Review, About Xinjiang);
> * Xinjiang Forum (Recent events and updates, Xinjiang forum
> (International Perspectives) Sub Forum: [Afghanistan] [China (Han)]
> [EU] [India] [Iran] [Israel] [Japan] [Pakistan] [Russia] [Saudi and
> the Arab world] [Turkey and the Turkic world] [Uyghurs] [U.S.A.]
> [Other countries or regions);
> * Xinjiang Study Database (Chronological and Thematic Survey) [access
> by password] ;
> * To join Xinjiang Review (Registration for membership, Subscription
> to the E/Journal (Xinjiang Review).
>
> [A site under construction - ed.]
>
> URL http://www.xinjiangreview.com
>
> Internet Archive (web.archive.org) [the site was not archived at the
> time of this abstract]
>
> Link reported by: Xinjiang Review (xinjiangreview--at--gmail.com)
>
> * Resource type [news - documents - study - corporate info. - online
> guide]:
> News / Study
> * Publisher [academic - business - govt. - library/museum - NGO - other]:
> Other
> * Scholarly usefulness [essential - v.useful - useful - interesting -
> marginal]:
> rating not available
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> Src: The Asian Studies WWW Monitor ISSN 1329-9778
> URL http://coombs.anu.edu.au/asia-www-monitor.html
> URL http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/asia-www-monitor
> The e-journal [est. 21 Apr 1994] provides free abstracts
> and reviews of new/updated online resources of interest to Asian Studies.
> The email edition of this Journal has now over 9,260 subscribers.
> The AS WWW Monitor does not necessarily endorse contents,
> or policies of the Internet resources it deals with.
>
> - regards -
>
> Dr T. Matthew Ciolek tmciolek--at--coombs.anu.edu.au
> Head, Internet Publications Bureau, RSPAS,
> ANU College of Asia and the Pacific,
> The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
> ph +61 (02) 6125 3124 fax: +61 (02) 62571893
> also, Asia Pacific Research Online at www.ciolek.com
>
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