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May 5, 2022 Director’s Pick Human Trafficking and Public Discussion in China: Debating the Feng County Incident On January 28 a post to the video platform Douyin (the Chinese version of TikTok) captured the attention of citizens across China. The brief video filmed in rural Feng County in Northern Jiangsu province, showed a woman chained by the neck to the wall in a small run-down building that was part of a larger family complex. The woman is not only chained but dirty, inadequately clothed for winter, and not properly fed. The woman struggles to answer questions about her well-being. As the video rapidly went viral, netizens raised questions about the woman’s situation, and the possible role of human trafficking both in her case and more broadly. Initially, the local government insisted that trafficking was not a factor, explaining that the woman had to be chained because of her mental health problems. Public calls for accountability persisted, and an investigation by higher-level officials has led to arrests for human trafficking, including the arrest of her husband, plus the dismissal of several local officials for dereliction of duty and reporting false information about the case. The woman was identified as originally from Yunnan, a province over 1,000 miles away from which many women leave to become wives to men in richer provinces; this includes a number of cases in which consent is, at best, unclear. She had been in Jiangsu for roughly 25 years, during which time she has borne eight children with the same father. This case has sparked intense discussion, both inside China and beyond, about issues including trafficking, mental health, the status of women, government corruption and accountability, law enforcement, and the role of public opinion and digital media. Our expert panel includes Johanna Ransmeier who has studied human trafficking in China, both past and present, Ma Zhiying, who works on mental health and mental health care delivery in China; and Bai Ruoyun who works on media and public discourse in China. Kenneth Pomeranz will moderate the discussion. Speakers: Johanna Ransmeier Associate Professor of History and the College The University of Chicago Zhiying Ma Assistant Professor at the Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy and Practice The University of Chicago Ruoyun Bai Associate Professor of Media Studies Department of Arts, Culture and Media University of Toronto (Scarborough) Moderator: Kenneth Pomeranz Faculty Director The University of Chicago Yuen Campus in Hong Kong Read more about Director’s Pick: https://bit.ly/3NZEEQK ➡ Subscribe to Yuen Campus Hong Kong Enews: https://bit.ly/3fxp8JP Twitter: https://twitter.com/UChicagoHK Facebook: https://facebook.com/UChicagoHK Linkedin: https://linkedin.com/company/UChicagoHK Instagram: https://instagram.com/UChicagoHK ▬ Content of the Webinar ▬ Opening - 0:00 Speaker Introduction – 1:52 Professor Ruoyun Bai’s View – 6:21 Professor Johanna Ransmeier’s View – 25:37 Professor Zhiying Ma’s View – 42:54 Panel Discussion – 1:03:28
Human Trafficking and Public Discussion in China: Debating the Feng County IncidentHuman Trafficking and Public Discussion in China: Debating the Feng County IncidentHuman Trafficking and Public Discussion in China: Debating the Feng County IncidentHuman Trafficking and Public Discussion in China: Debating the Feng County Incident
Human Trafficking and Public Discussion in China: Debating the Feng County Incident