Citations:Jingxin

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English citations of Jingxin

In Jiangsu[edit]

  • 2005 April 22, “Chlorine spill leaves villages with toxic legacy”, in South China Morning Post[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on April 21, 2024[2]:
    'After two very loud bangs, yellow fumes were wafting everywhere, just like the oilseed rape fields,' said Mr Zhu, a resident of Jingxin village.

In Jilin[edit]

Map including 敬信村 Ching-hsin-t'sun[sic – meaning Ching-hsin-ts'un] (AMS, 1954)
  • [1969, Current Background[3], numbers 869-898, United States Consulate General (Hong Kong, China), →ISSN, →OCLC, page 10:
    The poor and lower-middle peasants of the Fangch'uan Production Brigade of the Chinghsin People's Commune in Hunch'un hsien, Yenpien Korean Autonomous Chou, which borders the Soviet Union, joined frontier guards stationed there in holding a rally to denounce the crimes of the Soviet revisionists.]
  • [1969 March 14 [1969 March 13], “Report from Border Areas”, in Daily Report: Foreign Radio Broadcasts[4], number 50, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, sourced from Peking NCNA International Service, →OCLC, page A 6[5]:
    Members of the Chinghsin people's commune in Hunchun County, Kirin Province, on the anti-revisionist forefront, demonstrated through the night.]
  • [1972 July 27 [1972 July 27], “All Nationalities Help Each Other in Kirin Chou”, in Daily Report: People's Republic of China[6], volume I, number 146, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, sourced from Peking NCNA International Service, →ISSN, →OCLC, page G 3[7]:
    People in multi-national Hunchun County in Northeast China's Yenpien Korean Autonomous Chou (Kirin Province) have made rapid progress in the revolution and production by closing their ranks under the guidance of the Chinese Communist Party's policy towards nationalities. []
    Chin Cheng-ho, a veteran cadre of Korean nationality, is secretary of the Chinghsin commune party committee. During the Cultural Revolution, he has led the whole commune to learn from Tachai, national pace-setter in agriculture.
    ]
  • 1992, New China Quarterly[8], numbers 23-30, New China News, Limited, →OCLC, page 30, column 1:
    In the first, a "small triangle" area covering about 1,000 sq km will be completed extending from the Rajin Port in the DPRK to China's Hunchun or Jingxin cities and then to Posyet Port in Russia.
  • 1993, Almanac of China's Foreign Economic Relations and Trade[9], 華潤貿易諮詢有限公司 [China Resources Trade Consultancy Company], →OCLC, page 436:
    Fangchuan village in Jingxin Town of Hunchun City is located at the place bordering on Russia and Korea. From a high place in the village, one can have a faint view of the Sea of Japan in the distance, and panoramic view of the scenery in China,[...]
  • 1995, Peter J. Rimmer, “Integrating China into East Asia: Cross-border Regions and Infrastructure Networks”, in Stuart Harris, Garry Klintworth, editors, China as a Great Power[10], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 319:
    More speculative plans are afoot for a world-class Tumen River Airport at Jingxin on China's border with Russia which lies on the polar route between Europe and Japan.
  • 2002, Jaeho Hwang, “The Perspective of Jilin Province”, in The Significance of Regionalism as an Element of China's Security and Foreign Policy: The Case of the Tumen River Area Development Project (TRADP)[11] (Thesis), London School of Economics and Political Science, sourced from Wei, Songxian & Xu, Xianwen (1994), ‘Kaifa Kaifang’ (Development and Openness), in Wen Yongji (ed.), Jianshezhong de Chuanguo Mofan Ze-Z-Zhou - Yanbian (Yanbian - The Country’s Standard Autonomous Prefecture Under Development), Yanbian Renmin Chubanshe, 1994, pp. 68-9 and Guojia Kewei Keji Tsujin Fazhan Yanjiu Zhongxin De Yanbian Zhou Gueihua Keti zu (The Leading Group of Yanbian Planning in the Centre for Promotion and Development on Science of Commission of National Planning) (1995), Yanbian: Mianxiang Weilai De Juezhe (Yanbian: Facing the Decision on Future), pp. 353-4, →OCLC, archived from the original on May 30, 2020, page 180:
    The TRADP on the Chinese side includes the large triangle area (Hunchun, Tumen, Yanji, Longjing), but the core area is Hunchun-Changlingzi-Jingxin-Fangchuan. The central and provincial governments need to ensure prefecture support for Hunchun.
  • 2002, Jaeho Hwang, “Economic and Institutional Constraints on the TRADP”, in The Significance of Regionalism as an Element of China's Security and Foreign Policy: The Case of the Tumen River Area Development Project (TRADP)[12] (Thesis), London School of Economics and Political Science, →OCLC, archived from the original on May 30, 2020, page 259:
    Uncoordinated expansion by competitive riparian countries would have caused waste or misallocation of scarce capital through overlapping projects, For example, the DPRK is trying to build Sonbong Airport, while China and Russia are holding out for their own international airports, in Jingxin and Khraskino.
  • 2019, Bo Gao, China's Economic Engagement in North Korea (Palgrave Series in Asia and Pacific Studies)‎[13], Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 94:
    For more than a decade, Chinese villagers in the Jingxin village on the Sino-DPRK border became used to hearing the noises of shooting and finding the floating corpses of North Korean escapees in the Tumen River.
  • 2020 August 2, “Border village turns into tourist attraction in China's Jilin”, in huaxia, editor, Xinhua News Agency[14], archived from the original on August 5, 2020[15]:
    A tourist strolls at Fangchuan Village in Jingxin Town of Hunchun, northeast China's Jilin Province, Aug. 1, 2020. Taking advantage of its unique culture and folk customs, the border village has turned into a tourist attraction and successfully merged agriculture with tourism by developing homestay and farm stay business.
  • 2022, Zhicheng Tang [湯治成], “The Conception and Strategy of Creating the Pacific Ocean Outlet in Northeast China and Making It a Coastal Economic Area”, in China’s Modernized National Governance and Development Strategy Driven by Scientific and Technological Innovation[16], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 98:
    According to the actual geographical situation, Jingxin Town, Chunhui[sic – meaning Hunchun] City, Jilin Province, is only 15 kilometers away from the Sea of Japan that leads to the Pacific Ocean.