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    https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/273 content_copy
    APA (7)ChicagoMLA content_copy
    . (1970, January 1). The ‘Four Togethers’ and ‘Three Gifts’ Handbook - An Overview. Cadre Materials, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/273 . The ‘Four Togethers’ and ‘Three Gifts’ Handbook - An Overview. Cadre Materials, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. January 1, 1970. https://n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/273 . The ‘Four Togethers’ and ‘Three Gifts’ Handbook - An Overview. Cadre Materials, Xinjiang Documentation Project Archive, Arts Digital Collections, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. 1 Jan. 1970. n2t.net/ark:/76271/23/273
  • Title: The ‘Four Togethers’ and ‘Three Gifts’ Handbook - An Overview
  • Description: This handbook contains instructions for campaign workers as they visited households to carry out “Four Togethers and Four Gifts” (四同四送 si tong si song) activities. Beginning sometime after 2014, when the fanghuiju campaign (访惠聚) was first implemented, these activities blended poverty alleviation work with knowledge dissemination and state surveillance. Cadres and other civil servants were assigned Uyghur or Kazakh “relatives”—usually family members of recent detainees—and lived, dined, and worked with them for extended periods.
  • Publisher: Xinjiang Documentation Project
  • Language: English
  • Format: PDF
  • Subject: Cadre Training Materials
  • Keywords: Cadre | data collection | fanghuiju | fanghuiju (访惠聚) campaign | re-education | surveillance
  • Item Type: Document
  • Collection: Cadre Materials
    • Additional Details
    • Description: This handbook contains instructions for campaign workers as they visited households to carry out “Four Togethers and Four Gifts” (四同四送 si tong si song) activities. Beginning sometime after 2014, when the fanghuiju campaign (访惠聚) was first implemented, these activities blended poverty alleviation work with knowledge dissemination and state surveillance. Cadres and other civil servants were assigned Uyghur or Kazakh “relatives”—usually family members of recent detainees—and lived, dined, and worked with them for extended periods.