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    Xinjiang Documentation Project. (1970, January 1). Convenience Police Station: 便民警务站 (Biànmín jǐngwùzhàn). Glossary of Terminology, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/580 Xinjiang Documentation Project. Convenience Police Station: 便民警务站 (Biànmín jǐngwùzhàn). Glossary of Terminology, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. January 1, 1970. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/580 Xinjiang Documentation Project. Convenience Police Station: 便民警务站 (Biànmín jǐngwùzhàn). Glossary of Terminology, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. 1 Jan. 1970. n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/580
  • Title: Convenience Police Station: 便民警务站 (Biànmín jǐngwùzhàn)
  • Audio:
  • Description: This is an audio recording of how to pronounce 便民警务站 (Biànmín jǐngwùzhàn). Convenience police stations are concrete, bulletproof installations that house medical equipment, charging stations for mobile phones, umbrellas and other “convenient” community services. Chen Quanguo first introduced these stations in the Tibetan Autonomous Region and then in Xinjiang after his transfer to the region in 2011. These stations are ubiquitous and are supposed to only be minutes away from the next station so that the police force could be mobilized and dispatched rapidly.
  • Creator: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Contributor: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Publisher: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Language:
  • Format: MP3
  • Keywords: key terms
  • Item Type: Sound File
  • Collection: Glossary of Terminology
    • Additional Details
    • Description: This is an audio recording of how to pronounce 便民警务站 (Biànmín jǐngwùzhàn). Convenience police stations are concrete, bulletproof installations that house medical equipment, charging stations for mobile phones, umbrellas and other “convenient” community services. Chen Quanguo first introduced these stations in the Tibetan Autonomous Region and then in Xinjiang after his transfer to the region in 2011. These stations are ubiquitous and are supposed to only be minutes away from the next station so that the police force could be mobilized and dispatched rapidly.